Thursday, October 11, 2012

Taseko Prosperity Mine Not a Done Deal


Chief Alphonse Sees Dim Future For Taseko's Prosperity Mine

BY CHIEF JOE ALPHONSE, 

VANCOUVER SUN OCTOBER 5, 2012

Re: New Prosperity will live up to its name, Sept. 20, and responsible mining begins before opening and ends long after closure, Sept. 27

The Prosperity Mine proposal and its prospects are far from a done deal.

First, the proposal is one which the company itself, and Environment Canada, initially claimed would be worse for the environment than the original plan that was soundly rejected by the federal government in 2010.

Since then, the company has tried to revise that claim. Earlier this summer, the company submitted an environmental-impact statement (EIS) which was rejected by the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA) and the relevant government ministries. The company received 250 criticisms dealing with major inaccuracies, omissions, failures to address issues outlined for it in February, and poor, often unreadable, drafting.

The above are all matters of verifiable public record.

Mr. Russell Hallbauer, president and CEO of Taseko Mines Ltd., says these issues have now all been addressed, but that claim has been made before and proved wrong. CEAA and other parties will review the new EIS and even if it is accepted as the basis for hearings, it will then have to stand up to public scrutiny. So will its economic claims and feasibility studies. We have analyses raising detailed specific problems with these economic reports, which at the hearings stage will not so easily be dismissed with platitudes.

Signed

Chief Joe Alphonse Tribal chair, Tsilhqot'in National Government

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Alexis Creek First Nation Opposed to New Prosperity Mine


Alexis Creek First Nation Press Release:

Tsilhqot’in Leaders and Communities fully opposed to “New” Prosperity Mine

Ervin Charleyboy does not speak for the Tsilhqot’in Nation


Alexis Creek BC (October 2, 2012):  Today the elected Chief and Council of the Alexis Creek First Nation (“Tsi Del Del”), one of the six Tsilhqot’in communities, called on Taseko Mines Ltd. to halt its desperate tactics that are being employed to promote its 3rd attempt to obtain federal approval for its proposed copper and gold mine at Teztan Biny (Fish Lake). 
In recent interviews and news releases, Taseko Mines and the former Alexis Creek Chief Ervin Charleyboy have emphasized Charleyboy’s support for the “new” Prosperity Mine proposal.  The news releases show that Taseko Mines has close ties with Charleyboy; in fact, in a press release issued by Charleyboy he praises Taseko Mine’s water management plans – plans that had yet to be publicly released or even provided to the Tsilhqot’in Chiefs. 
“With all due respect to the long years of service from Ervin Charleyboy, he is neither a spokesperson nor an elected representative of the Alexis Creek First Nation or the Tsilhqot’in Nation.  The Alexis Creek First Nation is opposed to the mine, and takes exception to Ervin’s attempts to portray young band members working on a fish habitat project for Ervin as a “youth committee” and an endorsement of the company’s mine proposal,” said Alexis Creek Chief Percy Guichon. 
“The Tsilhqot’in people have spoken loud and clear: they do not want a project of this size, with such environmental risk and in an area as important as Fish Lake.  We welcome other opportunities to develop mining projects in less sensitive areas, but the Tsilhqot’in Nation is fully opposed to this project,” said Tsilhqot’in Nation Tribal Chair Chief Joe Alphonse. 
Chief Alphonse: “Ervin is free to speak his mind.  He is entitled to his opinion.    But he should not be confused as a spokesperson for our communities.  He is not.  There is overwhelming opposition in our communities to this mine, and it is shameful that the company is stooping to quoting one individual’s support in its press releases.” 
Chief Guichon:  “The Tsilhqot’in are participating in good faith in the federal. environmental panel review.  We are confident that this new Panel will see through the company’s desperate tactics and its version of the mine already deemed worse for the environment.  What is clear to us from all of this is that Taseko Mines Ltd. lacks a social license to operate, and is desperate enough to seize on individuals acting alone to advance an illusion of community support.”

Media Contacts: 
Chief Percy Guichon:      250-267-2507 (cell)          250-481-3335 (alternate)             
Chief Joe Alphonse:        250-305-8282 (cell)          250-392-3918 (alternate)

Friday, September 14, 2012

MiningWatch Canada Flags Prosperity Mine Risks

Prosperity Mine Too Risky for Investors


MiningWatch Canada today issued a statement that Taseko Mines' proposed Prosperity Mine is at too great a risk of not being approved to be a good investment.



MiningWatch Canada put forward the following points to back up its claim:
1. Taseko's New Prosperity Project continues to face major challenges in obtaining necessary environmental approvals. 
2. The New Prosperity does not have and is unlikely to get a social licence to operate from the affected First Nations communities and Aboriginal governments. 
3. The New Prosperity capital and operating cost estimates do not include key factors that will affect the economic viability of the project and share price volatility is likely to continue. 
4. Political support from provincial and federal governments for the New Prosperity Project is uncertain.
5. The fierce opposition to this project from Aboriginal peoples and environmental organizations may result in lengthy litigation and could have implications for the future of other extraction projects in BC.
The site mentions that Taseko Mines has over 55% of its net assets listed in the Prosperity Mine project, which still faces an environmental review process that it has failed once already.

The Canadian Pension Plan holds about $4 million worth of Taseko Mines shares and MiningWatch Canada is in the process of notifying them of their analysis.

Teztan Biny Supporter Fundraising


Tsilhqot'in National Government Seeks Donations


This just in from J.P. Laplante at TNG:
Dear Teztan Biny Supporters,

I’m writing to ask you to consider donating in support of the Tsilhqot’in effort to protect Teztan Biny, and to share this email and web-link with others who may be like-minded.

Last month, we were added to the “Small Change Fund”, which is an organization and website that highlights specific grassroots fundraising efforts.  The full description of the project we are fundraising for can be found here:  http://smallchangefund.org/projects/saving-fish-lake-from-open-pit-mining-raise-our-voices/
 Through the Small Change Fund, we are fundraising for a media-training workshop to initiate a Tsilhqot’in youth film contest.  We had intended to deliver this workshop at the 2012 Teztan Gathering, but due to constraints we were unable to do so.  Regardless, we continue to fundraise to deliver the workshop and contest in the fall and winter.  Our objective is that the videos produced by Tsilhqot’in youth can act as a means to get their voices heard on the issue of Teztan Biny/Fish Lake, as well as other important topics that face Tsilhqot’in youth today.  As demonstrated at this year’s Gathering, the youth have an important and powerful role to play in protecting their own future, and you can assist by making the workshop and contest a reality. Chief Marilyn Baptiste has already donated $1000 as prize money for the contest. We now need to fundraise to deliver the workshop and the contest.  We are also looking for workshop facilitators (film-makers, technicians) and volunteers to help in the organizing.  My contact information is below if you have any questions. Please consider sharing this with others who may be interested in helping!
Best,

J.P. LaplanteMining, Oil and Gas Manager
Tsilhqot’in National Government
253 4th Ave North, Wiliams Lake BC V2G 4T4
Tel: 250-392-3918Fax: 250-398-5798Email: jlaplante@tsilhqotin.ca

Taseko Mines New Prosperity Website

Is Taseko Mines' New Prosperity Medium the Message?

Taseko Mines' use of keywords indicates it seeks traffic interested in aboriginal issues












Taseko Mines has a new website for the "New Prosperity" Mine proposal. I reached it by clicking on a Google Ad from a Google Search page.

It's green and glossy, kind of like Enbridge's Gateway Pipeline videos and websites, although they really go overboard showing scenes like this:








The Taseko Code

What I really found interesting though is in the code of the site. I know this is geeky but look at the keywords Taseko is using to attract web searchers to their site:
meta name="description" content="Taseko mines, Taseko, prosperity mine, prosperity, Aboriginal mining, Aboriginal, Gold & copper mining, Gold mining, Copper mining Gold, Copper, mining British Columbia." 
Ok, it's probably easier to look at them this way:

New Prosperity's Keywords

  • Taseko mines, 
  • Taseko, 
  • prosperity mine, 
  • prosperity, 
  • Aboriginal mining, 
  • Aboriginal, 
  • Gold & copper mining, 
  • Gold mining, 
  • Copper mining Gold, 
  • Copper, 
  • mining British Columbia
Note the use of "Aboriginal" and "Aboriginal Mining".  I suppose they are hoping that people searching for linkages between Aboriginal people and mining will find their site.

The site has discussions going on the mine, question and answer stuff. Below is a clip of some of the comments and responses:












The site also makes the claim that it is good for Aboriginal people:







I always find it interesting when one group claims it knows what is good for another. Commenters on the New Prosperity website state unequivocally that First Nations never even went there (ever) until the lake was stocked 20 years ago.

Everyone has a right to disagree with a mine like Taseko Mines' Prosperity project. And if it's your backyard you have even more of a say. If it's a spiritual place for you and your community, well no one can take that away or disavow it. 

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Taseko Mines' Shoddy Environmental Impact Statement


Taseko Mines Shirking Impact Statement Requirements

Here are links to stories about Taseko Mines:

1)      Peter O’Neill (Postmedia online version with more content than Van Sun story) – “BC junior miner accused of making “misleading” statement to federal agency”



2)      Peter O’Neill’s story in the Vancouver Sun – “Taseko Report Misled Ottawa over potential quake impact”



4)      Dirk Meissner in Canadian Press (printed across the country – see list below for some of the publications, including Winnepeg, Brandon, Calgary)


5)      Richard Gilbert in the Journal of Commerce (July 23) – “Draft documents for billion dollar mine missing key info”

6)      Sierra Club BC Blog Entry/Press Release – Fish Lake Submission Fails to Meet Guidelines (July 18, 2012)

Red Chris Mine Roadblock Set Up By Tahltans


Care of J.P. LaPlante:

TAHLTANS SET UP ROADBLOCK TO OPPOSE RED CHRIS MINE

Press Release
August 30, 2012
Totogga Lake, BC

Concerned members of the Tahltan Nation have set up a road block on Highway #37, 80 km south of Dease Lake, BC at the Tatogga Lake Resort.



The Tahltan Leadership has spoken out strongly against the mine and criticized the BC mine permitting process that is viewed as corrupt. The BC Liberal Government has given free rein to mining companies leaving the environment vulnerable to contamination and disruption. Tahltans have serious concerns with the design of the tailings ponds and the potential for leakage and wide scale environmental disasters that will result should tailings leak into the environment.

Two Tahltan women Kukdookaa and Adanza’a will be at the blockade with other elders and concerned Tahltans handing out information and educating those travelling along Highway #37 about the critical issues facing the Tahltans and their homelands.

Kukdookaa is also a grandmother who believes in fighting for the rights of the Tahltan Nation and will go to any length to protect the Tahltan people, wildlife, fish, and the environment. “It is irresponsible of the BC Government to provide permits while serious issues remain unresolved with the people who occupy the area.” Wild game outfitters, resort owners and other business people also have concerns with the location of the road and the disruption to wildlife and the pristine wilderness.

The Red Chris Mine is within the territory of the Tahltan Nation who have occupied territory since time immemorial. The specific area where the Red Chris Mine is being constructed is home to many species of animals including Stone Sheep, Mountain Goat, Moose and Caribou. The Tahltans depend upon these animals for subsistence and believe that the mine will destroy the animal’s habitat and calving grounds that is sacred to the Tahltans.


At the Tahltan Central Council Annual General Assembly held in July 2012 a resolution was passed to develop a No Red Chris Campaign to oppose the Red Chris Mining Project.

Adanza’a is a 73 year old great grandmother on the blockade to protect her homeland for her grandchildren so that they can enjoy what we have today without the destruction mining will bring. She said that, “Our ancestors fought and died for our homeland to protect our way of life for us and the least we can do is fight for our rights and the rights of generations to come.

For more information contact Kukdookaa or Adanza’a at ktab777@hotmail.com or call Tatogga Resort at 250-234-3526 or call 250-771-5604