Community | February 19, 2011 | 17 comments

Uranium demand threatens Grand Canyon biodiversity

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JanforGore
The natural beauty and unique species of the Grand Canyon are "in the crosshairs" because of renewed interest in the region's uranium reserves. That is the warning from critics of the mines, ahead of the release of a government report on Friday on the potential impact of fresh mining.

Mining has been banned within the Grand Canyon national park since President Roosevelt declared it a national monument in 1908. But since 2003, foreign companies have submitted 2,215 claims to prospect on the edge of the canyon.

Ken Salazar, the secretary of the interior, temporarily withdrew 1m acres of land from exploration in 2009 to allow time for an environmental assessment. Salazar must decide by July whether to ban "mineral entry" for two-thirds of the claims for the next 20 years.

Uranium deposits mineralise in 2,000-feet deep "breccia" pipes, a geological feature common to the world-famous golden brown sedimentary rock in the canyon. When left alone, the uranium is not harmful. But once dissolved in water, it can leach into springs and aquifers that then feed into the Colorado river, which ultimately supplies 18 million people in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. The water can remain contaminated for decades after a mine shuts.

Taylor McKinnon, campaigns director of public lands at the Centre for Biological Diversity, said the expansion of mining would threaten the park's delicate ecosystem that ranges from desert scrub in the parched canyon to the Californian condors that wheel above the craggy outcrops.

He said: "The Grand Canyon is an international treasure and known for its breathtaking expanses. Its isolated seeps, springs and caves harbour a remarkable diversity of life, including species found nowhere else on earth. Uranium mining puts those species in the crosshairs."

Mining companies have been drawn to the Grand Canyon area since the 1940s, because of large quantities of high-grade uranium that fuelled the nuclear weapons and nuclear power industries in the US.

But fast-paced nuclear power programmes in countries such as China and Korea are fuelling a new rush for "hard rock", and have sent uranium prices soaring from $7.10 a pound in 2001, to $63.88 a pound in 2011.

Vane Minerals, a UK-based company, has submitted approximately 700 claims. Kristopher Hefton, the company's director and chief operating officer, said: "The deposits are among the highest-grade deposits that you can find in the United States, so they are a good target for exploration and mining."

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17 comments // Uranium demand threatens Grand Canyon biodiversity

  • Gillian_Marktoo
  • Wetdog
    • +2
      Wetdog  
    • Grand Canyon is not the only park in danger. Other parks and monuments include Capitol Reef Nat. Park; Grand Staircase-Escalante Nat. Monument, Canyonlands NP, Colorado Nat. Mon. and Dinosaur NP.

      All contain the same geologic formations containing uranium.

      Colorado NM in Grand Junction CO has mines and roads blasted out in the 1940s and 50s clearly visible on the main features of the park.

    • 1 year ago
  • Varex_Sythe
    • 0
      Varex_Sythe  
    • Is it me, or is there something stupid about companies looking for non renewable energy sources that, in gathering and in consumption of, damage the environment?

    • 1 year ago
  • royulery
    • +1
      royulery  
    • at the current rate of power usage, all the u235 in the world won't power the u.s. for a generation. soon the big trench.

    • 1 year ago
  • Maggielee
    • +1
      Maggielee  
    • Mine uranium on the edge of our Grand Canyon??? Mined by foreign companies??? CAN ANY ONE BE SERIOUSLY CONSIDERING THIS????? Just strip the whole damn country and spoil every river and finish off the gulf! Leave nothing of beauty in this country!! My God what can they be thinking?

    • 1 year ago
  • Wetdog
  • Pheena187
  • Gravity_Man
    • 0
      Gravity_Man  
    • Pheena187:

      Super Idea Pheena187! Uranium must be plenty in the Gulf!!! We should all mail British Petroleum immediately. They can pay their debt to the US with uranium deposits instead of money!

      Win-Win, plus Win #3 => Save the Colorado Clock Tower!

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
  • Pheena187
  • Gravity_Man
    • 0
      Gravity_Man  
    • JanforGore:

      Hmm. Imagine. Sitting at the top. Pen in hand. Here so & so, go do this. And so & so goes does that. Uhm feel the power, surging, the power, coursing through your veins, the power, filling your heart til you feel like the mighty Buffalo Hunter shooting one bison after another. African safari, shooting the lions and making caps from the cubs soft fur.

      And no one has the power to stop you.
      And no one has the power to stop you.
      And no one has the power to stop you.

    • 1 year ago
  • trut
    • +1
      trut  
    • No way Jan. You guys in the States have ruined countless other nations for industry. If the USA needs uranium, they should get it on their own property.

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
  • coolplanet
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • +3
      JanforGore  
    • This simply must not be allowed. Now tell me nuclear is clean and green.

      On edit: To the lurker who voted this comment down... come out and face the topic like an adult. I suppose you want to see the Colorado River that is already dwindling poisoned beyond repair and those who live near it getting cancer and the death of biodiversity?

      Nuclear kills.

      And also, Keep your damned greedy hands off our national treasures!

    • 1 year ago
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