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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
10.30.2003 ET
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CSR News from:
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United Steelworkers
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News Category:
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Rio Tinto Pump and Dump Pollution Plan Rejected By Broad Grouping
Threats to Environment, Community, Wildlife and Property Rights Cited
(CSRwire) UTAH - A broad array of organizations and individuals today held a
press conference at the Utah State Capitol calling for modification of a
planned project that would allow Rio Tinto plc/Ltd (NYSE: RTP),
(RIO.L), (RIO.AX)subsidiary Kennecott Utah Copper to dump thousands of
tons of contaminants into the Jordan River and, ultimately, the marshes of
the Great Salt Lake.
The planned project has supposedly been devised to treat or dispose of
groundwater polluted by Kennecott. Pollutants include sulfates, acids and
metals that can cause cancer and damage to the liver, kidneys and nervous
system.
State and county legislators, private well owners, the United Steelworkers
of America, the Sierra Club and private wetland managers all expressed
alarm at the plan. They said it could threaten private well owners’
rights, waterfowl and waterfowl habitat, the Jordan River, the Great Salt
Lake and Salt Lake County residents.
The United States Fish and Wildlife Service, the Salt Lake County Public
Utilities Department, the water commissioner for the lower Jordan River
and numerous potentially affected individuals have already publicly aired
their concerns with the plan.
Under the plan, one series of wells would pump polluted water to a
“reverse-osmosis” treatment plant. Treated water would be
delivered to residents for drinking while the wastes produced would be
dumped into the Jordan River.
One of the contaminants that Kennecott plans to dump in the Jordan River
is selenium, which has been shown to cause reproductive problems for
numerous wetlands bird species. This fact earned the ire Dick West,
President of an association representing private wetland managers on the
south end of the Great Lake.
“Kennecott’s selenium discharges would ultimately end up in
and around wetlands along the shores of the Great Salt Lake. These
wetlands are vital habitat for large populations of migratory shorebirds
and waterfowl,” said Dick West. “As the selenium accumulated
over the forty year life of the plan, the ability of the lake to support
such wildlife would potentially be threatened severely. Utah hunters and
other wildlife enthusiasts would pay the price.”
Added West, “Kennecott has a history of destroying wetlands through
its selenium discharges. However, the company has recently bragged in its
glossy public relations materials that it’s reduced these discharges
and is protecting Utah wetlands. So it is ironic that Kennecott now
intends to adopt a plan that may destroy those wetlands.”
Private well-owners expressed alarm that Kennecott’s planned project
would lower the water table and cause their wells to go dry.
“My family and I rely on our well for drinking water and for our
livelihoods. Kennecott compromising our ability to do so would violate
our property rights,” said Rod Dansie, who owns a well in Herriman.
“I don’t think Kennecott is concerned with cleaning up its
pollution. They just want to generate drinking water for their planned
Daybreak mixed-use development. Kennecott wants to make money off its
real estate, but Utah well owners shouldn’t be left high and
dry.”
State and county legislators at the press conference questioned why
environmental regulators would agree to the plan. “Utah Department
of Environmental Quality’s mandate is not to authorize wholesale
polluting of our lakes and streams,” said Utah House Minority Leader
Brent Goodfellow, D-West Valley. “What we need is a sound cleanup,
not another Superfund site."
Goodfellow has brought the matter to the attention of the Utah Legislative
Management Committee. He said the committee is scheduled to discuss it at
its November 18 meeting.
One speaker at the press conference portrayed the planned project as a
missed opportunity to create jobs.
“Rather than disposing of the pollution in an environmentally
threatening way, why not seek to recover toxic metals from the
plume?” questioned United Steelworkers of America representative
Kelly Hanson. “The aquifer is potentially a liquid mine, and mining
it could create employment for Utah residents.”
Under the plan, some of the contaminants extracted from the polluted
groundwater- including those from the highly toxic acidic core- would be
disposed of in the unlined Magna Tailings Impoundment. Marc Heileson of
the Sierra Club argued that this is not an appropriate disposal method.
“This impoundment is totally inadequate as a toxic metals
repository. These wastes must be put in a secure landfill. If the plan
is allowed to go ahead, it’s entirely possible the toxic metals will
end up mixing with Great Salt Lake waters and sediments,” said
Heileson.
“It is absolutely crucial that Kennecott be forced to clean the
groundwater it contaminated for so many years,” stated United
Steelworkers of America Environmental Projects Coordinator Diane Heminway.
“However, it makes absolutely no sense to let Kennecott dump the
harmful contaminants back into Utah’s surface water or dispose of
them in an unlined landfill. This pump and dump plan is
outlandish.”
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