FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Friday, November 24, 2006
Sport Fishing Industry Leaders Blast Pebble
Mine Proposal
Full-Page Ads in Fish Alaska and Fly Fisherman Magazines
Urge Governor-Elect Palin To Protect Bristol Bay Watershed
CONTACTS:
Tim Bristol, Trout Unlimited (907) 321-3291
Robert Ramsay, American Fly Fishing Trade Association, (706)
355-3804
Jim Bartschi, Scott Fly Rods, (800) 728-7208
Anchorage, AlaskaIn an unprecedented move,
37 sport fishing industry leaders, including Scott Fly Rods,
Orvis, and the American Fly Fishing Trade Association today
urged Alaska Governor-elect Sarah Palin, the Alaska Department
of Natural Resources, and the federal Bureau of Land Management
to reject the Pebble mine and permanently protect the Bristol
Bay watershed from industrial mineral development.
The fishing equipment manufacturers and suppliers
message, delivered in an open letter to Governor-elect Palin
and agency officials, will be featured in full-page, four-color
ads in the December, January, and February issues of Fish
Alaska and the February issue of Fly Fisherman Magazine. The
combined paid circulation of these two popular fishing magazines
is more than 155,000. Trout Unlimited is paying for the ads,
which prominently feature the logos of the 37 retailers and
the industrys trade association. (For a copy of the
letter and the ad, go to: www.renewableresourcescoalition.org/flyfishingad.pdf )
The prospect of hard rock mining in the
Bristol Bay area of Alaska scares the hell out of the world
fly angling community and the businesses that serve it,
said Robert Ramsay, president of the American Fly Fishing
Trade Association (AFFTA), which represents more than 400
fly-fishing manufacturers, sales representatives, retailers,
outfitters and specialty media.
These are some of the most cherished fly
fishing waters on earth, Ramsay said. Prized not
just for their fisheries, but recognized for their broad wilderness
character here in America and across the world, Bristol Bays
public lands must continue to be protected from the devastation
that would result from hard rock mine prospecting and development,
he added.
According to a recent joint University of Alaska/University
of Montana study commissioned by Trout Unlimited, the Bristol
Bay salmon fishery generates an estimated $400 million per
year with sport fishing contributing a whopping $122 million
to that total. Tens of thousands of anglers, hunters, and
wildlife watchers from around the world visit the Bristol
Bay watershed annually. In 2005 alone, the region boasted
65,000 recreational visitors, according to the study.
Wild salmon and trout are the real gold
mine in Bristol Bay, said Tim Bristol, Alaska Director
for Trout Unlimited. When the Pebble promoters submitted
their mining plans in September of this year, the prospect
of dewatered salmon and trout streams, giant tailing dams,
roads though the wilderness, and pipeline complexes sent shockwaves
throughout the sportfishing world.
To date, the proposed Pebble Mine has garnered
a great deal of attention - and
rightfully so. It would be the largest open pit gold and copper
mine in North America, take water from critical salmon rearing
streams of the Bristol Bay, and disturb core wildlife habitat
for key game species.
Nearly everyone who loves fish and fishing
has a story of a river, a lake, a stretch of stream that was
lost to pollution and irresponsible development. We are not
going to stand idly by and let that happen to the Bristol
Bay watershed, which is truly irreplaceable, stated
Jim Bartschi, President of Scott Fly Rods, on why the company
chose to participate in the project.
In applications to the State of Alaska, Northern
Dynasty Minerals, the Canadian mining company that owns the
Pebble mine prospect, has detailed plans that include a 15
square-mile complex with an open pit measuring approximately
two miles long, a mile and half wide, and 1,700 feet deep.
To build the tailings storage facilities, Northern Dynasty
proposes taking water from several critical salmon and trout
streams and retaining the water and mine waste behind some
of the largest dams on the planet, which would eliminate several
miles of streams. Northern Dynasty is a junior mining company
that has never actually constructed and operated a large mine.
Two earthen dams would be constructed in this
earthquake prone zone, ranging from 740 feet high and 4.3
miles long, to 700 feet high and 2.9 miles long. The larger
dam would be higher than the Hoover Dam or the Grand Coulee
Dam which are made of much hardier concrete. The water sought
by the mining company each day amounts to three times the
daily water usage of Anchorage, Alaska (pop. 277,000). Infrastructure,
including a haul road and port, for the Pebble Mine also could
pave the way for a massive mining district that includes BLM
lands covered in the draft Resource Management Plan that is
currently open for comment.
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For more information, please contact:
Renewable
Resources Coalition, Inc.
500 L Street, Suite 502
Anchorage, AK 99501
Telephone: (907) 632-9933
Fax: (907) 272-9319
Email: info@renewableresourcescoalition.org |