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Chuitna Coal Strip Mine

PacRim Coal, a Delaware corporation funded by Texas investors is working to develop Alaska’s largest coal strip mine 45 miles west of Anchorage near the communities of Tyonek and Beluga.

The Chuitna Coal Project will be the largest coal strip mine in Alaska and the first project in the State’s history to completely mine through and ‘remove’ a wild Alaska salmon stream consequentially trading away wild Alaska salmon, a renewable resource for a non-renewable resource.

The Economics of Wild Alaska Salmon Habitat

In October 2011 Cook Inletkeeper released a new report of the potential economic costs and benefits of the Chuitna coal strip mine which finds economic and environmental damages to fisheries, ecosystems, air, climate and water quality could cost Alaska $2 billion in economic losses during the life of the project, which is up to six times greater than the economic benefits. The report gives Governor Sean Parnell a strong foundation to reject plans to mine through salmon habitat as part of the Chuitna coal strip mine.

Background

PacRim Coal, a Delaware corporation funded by Texas investors is working to develop Alaska’s largest coal strip mine 45 miles west of Anchorage near the communities of Tyonek and Beluga.

PacRim intends to completely remove 11 miles of Middle Creek a primary tributary of the Chuit River that the Alaska Department of Fish and Game identifies as important to salmon. PacRim’s mining plan removes the entire streambed, bank-to-bank to a depth of 350 feet destroying the underlying water flow paths essential for overwinter survival of salmon eggs. This level of impact will fundamentally alter the underlying hydrology to a point where stream reconstruction is fundamentally impossible; Middle Creek will be destroyed.

The Chuitna, or Chuit River is one of the only non-glaciated clear flowing streams on the west side of Northern Cook Inlet. Called the “Kenai River of the West Side” by locals, it is known for its king and silver salmon runs.

PacRim’s coal strip mine, known as the Chuitna Coal Project is just the first of 3 phases. PacRim’s initial mining scheme for the headwaters of the Chuitna Watershed includes stripping over 5000 acres during a 25 year period.

The mining area is comprised of headwaters, wetlands (40% of the mining area), tundra and forest; all vital to the downstream water quality and the health of salmon populations. Additional adjacent leases combine for 60 square miles of potential coal strip mining straddling the headwaters of the Chuitna Watershed.

To download a copy of the Chuitna Topo click here.

A Historic Precedent

The State of Alaska has never allowed the wholesale removal of a salmon stream. Permitting PacRim’s Chuitna Coal Project will set a historic precedent for fish and game management; destroying healthy salmon streams for non-renewable resources. If the State allows mining through the Chuit then no salmon stream in the state is safe.

There has never been a successful salmon stream restoration after the scale of destruction PacRim is proposing, and there is no scientific evidence to suggest Middle Creek could be restored to its current state of productivity. PacRim’s Chuitna coal strip mine is a ‘Grand Experiment’ that will trade sustainable salmon runs for coal exports, destroying wild Alaska salmon streams to power Pacific Rim economies.

All coal from the Chuitna Coal Project is bound for export to Pacific Rim coal fired power plants. Coal fired power plants release toxic Mercury into the air which then travels by atmospheric and oceanic currents to Alaska, elevating the levels of Mercury found in our ocean fish.

Despite the economic significance of salmon to local and state economies there is no law that bans mining through a salmon steam. The authority to protect salmon streams from mining impacts is discretionary; State Agencies can issue a permit that would allow the wholesale removal of a salmon stream setting a dangerous precedent for the future of salmon.

To download the Toxic Trade Map click here.

Salmon Streams are Unsuitable for Coal Strip Mining

Alaska’s salmon are an important part of our culture and economy providing our families and communities and with a sustainable infusion of income, jobs, and healthy food. Maintaining this valuable renewable resource requires protecting wild salmon habitat.

Cook Inletkeeper has petitioned the Alaska Department of Natural Resources to deem the Chuit River and its tributaries as ‘Unsuitable for Coal Mining’. Alaska’s coal mining laws allow citizens to petition to have certain lands designated as unsuitable for surface coal mining and as a source of healthy food and strong sustainable economies salmon streams are unsuitable for coal strip mining.

The Alaska Department of Natural Resources failed to meet their legal obligation to render a decision on the Unsuitable Lands Petition by the April 19th deadline.

Additional Resources

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