http://ndnnews.info/news/2010/02/uranium-mining-begins-near-grand-canyon-threatening-sacred-lands
Grand Canyon, AZ — In
defiance of legal challenges and
a U.S. Government moratorium,
Canadian company Denison Mines
has started mining uranium on
the north rim of the Grand
Canyon. According to the
Arizona Daily Sun the mine
has been operating since
December 2009.
Denison plans on extracting
335 tons of uranium per day out
of the “Arizona 1 Mine”, which
is set to operate four days per
week. The hazardous ore will be
hauled by truck more than 300
miles through towns and
communities to the company’s
White Mesa mill located near
Blanding, Utah.
After being pressured by
environmental groups, U.S.
Secretary of Interior Ken
Salazar initially called for a
two-year moratorium on new
mining claims in a buffer zone
of 1 million acres around Grand
Canyon National Park, but the
moratorium doesn’t include
existing claims such as
Denison’s. The moratorium also
doesn’t address mining claims
outside of the buffer zone.
The Grand Canyon is ancestral
homeland to the Havasupai and
Hualapai Nations. Although both
Indigenous Nations have banned
uranium mining on their
reservations the U.S. Forest
Service and Bureau of Land
Management may permit thousands
of mining claims on surrounding
lands.
Due to recent increases in
the price of uranium and the
push for nuclear power nearly
8,000 new mining claims now
threaten Northern Arizona.
Uranium mined from the
Southwestern U.S. is
predominately purchased by
countries such as France (Areva)
& Korea for nuclear energy.
In July of 2009 members of
the Havasupai Nation and their
allies gathered for four days on
the South Rim of the Grand
Canyon at their sacred site Red
Butte to address the renewed
threat. Red Butte has long been
endangered by the on-going
threat of uranium mining.
Under an anachronistic 1872
mining law, created when pick
axes and shovels were used,
mining companies freely file
claims on public lands. The law
permits mining regardless of
cultural impacts.
OBAMA APPROVES NEW NUCLEAR
REACTORS AND INCREASED NEED FOR
URANIUM
Currently there are 104
nuclear reactors in the United
States which supply 20% of the
U.S.’s electricity. In January
the Obama administration
approved a $54 billion dollar
taxpayer loan in a guarantee
program for new nuclear reactor
construction, three times what
Bush previously promised in
2005.
Since 2007, seventeen companies
have now sought government
approval for 26 more reactors
with plans to complete four by
2018 and up to eight by 2020.
New reactors are estimated to
cost more than $12 billion each.
Although nuclear energy is
hailed by some as a solution to
the current U.S. energy crisis
and global warming, those more
closely impacted by uranium
mining and transportation
recognize the severity of the
threat.
THE COLORADO RIVER, WATER &
URANIUM’S DEADLY LEGACY
Uranium is a known cause of
cancers, organ damage,
miscarriages & birth defects.
Drilling for the radioactive
material has been found to
contaminate underground aquifers
that drain into the Colorado
River, and sacred springs that
have sustained Indigenous
Peoples in the region. In
addition, surface water can flow
into drill holes and mine shafts
which can also poison
underground water sources.
Emerging in the Rocky
Mountains in North Central
Colorado and winding 1,450 miles
to the Gulf of California, the
Colorado River is held sacred by
more than 34 Indigenous Nations.
The Colorado also provides
drinking water for up to 27
million people in seven states
throughout the Southwest.
The river that carves the Grand
Canyon has been extensively used
by the agricultural industry and
cities that are dependent for
drinking water, so much so that
it now ceases to flow to the
Gulf of California,
forcing members of the Cocopah
Nation (The People of the River)
in Northern Mexico to abandon
their homelands and relocate
elsewhere.
Today there are more than 2,000
abandoned uranium mines in the
Southwest. U.S. government
agencies have done little or
nothing to clean up contaminated
sites and abandoned mines. At
Rare Metals near Tuba City on
the Diné (Navajo) Nation a layer
of soil and rock is the only
covering over 2.3 million tons
of hazardous waste. A rock dam
surrounds the radioactive waste
to control runoff water that
flows into nearby Moenkopi Wash.
Throughout the Diné Nation, Diné
families have been subject to
decades of radioactive
contamination ranging from
unsafe mining conditions to
living in houses built from
uranium tailings.
Well water is documented by the
US Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) as undrinkable in
at least 22 communities such as
Black Falls on the Dine’ Nation.
According to the EPA,
“Approximately 30 percent of the
Navajo population does not have
access to a public drinking
water system and may be using
unregulated water sources with
uranium contamination.” Flocks
of sheep and other livestock
still graze among radioactive
tailing piles and ingest
radioactive water.
According to the Navajo
Nation up to 2.5 million gallons
of uranium contaminated water is
leaching out of the Shiprock
Uranium Mill near Shiprock, New
Mexico into the San Juan River
every year. At the Church Rock
Mine in New Mexico, which is now
attempting to re-open, up to
875,000 cubic yards of
radioactive waste continue to
contaminate the land.
In July 1979 a dirt dam breached
on the Navajo Nation at a
uranium processing plant
releasing more than 1,100 tons
of radioactive waste and nearly
100 million gallons of
contaminated fluid into the Rio
Puerco (which ultimately flows
into the Colorado River) near
Church Rock, NM. This was the
single largest nuclear accident
in US history. Thousands of Diné
families that live in the
region, including those forced
to relocate from the Joint Use
Area due to coal mining,
continue to suffer health
impacts resulting from the
spill.
In 2005 the Diné Nation
government banned uranium mining
and processing within its
borders due to uranium’s harmful
legacy of severe health impacts
and poisoning of the
environment. And yet, high
cancer rates, birth defects and
other health impacts still bear
out the uranium industry’s
dangerous legacy.
NUCLEAR WASTE & INDIGENOUS
SACRED LANDS
Today the US has nearly
60,000 tons of highly
radioactive spent nuclear waste
stored in concrete dams at
nuclear power plants throughout
the country. The waste increases
at a rate of 2,000 tons per
year. Depleted Uranium (DU) is
a byproduct of uranium
enrichment and reprocessing
which has controversial military
uses including armor piercing
projectiles. DU has been found
to cause long-term health
effects ranging from harming
organs to causing miscarriages
and birth defects.
In 1987 Congress initiated a
controversial project to
transport and store almost all
of the U.S.’s toxic waste at
Yucca Mountain located about 65
miles southwest of Las Vegas,
Nevada. Yucca Mountain has been
held holy to the Paiute and
Western Shoshone Nations since
time immemorial.
In February 2009 Obama met a
campaign promise to cut funding
for the multibillion dollar
Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste
Repository project. The
controversial project was
initially proposed in 1987 with
radioactive waste to be shipped
from all over the U.S. via rails
and highways. Currently a new
proposal for an experimental
method of extracting additional
fuel from nuclear waste called
“reprocessing” renews the threat
to desecrate the sacred mountain
on Western Shoshone lands.
Western Shoshone lands, which
have never been ceeded to the
U.S. government, have long been
under attack by the military and
nuclear industry. Between 1951
and 1992 more than 1,000 nuclear
bombs have been detonated above
and below the surface at an area
called the Nevada Test Site on
Western Shoshone lands which
make it one of the most bombed
nations on earth. Communities in
areas around the test site faced
exposure to radioactive fallout
which has caused cancers,
leukemia & other
illnesses. Western Shoshone
spiritual practitioner Corbin
Harney, who has since passed on,
helped initiate a grassroots
effort to shutdown the test site
and abolish nuclear weapons.
Indigenous Peoples in the
Marshall Islands have also faced
serious impacts due to U.S.
nuclear testing. In her book,
Conquest: Sexual Violence &
American Indian Genocide,
Andrea Smith reports that some
Indigenous Peoples in the
islands have all together
stopped reproducing due to the
severity of cancer and birth
defects they have faced.
CONTINUING RESISTANCE
In March 1988 more than 8,000
people converged for massive 10
day direct action to “reclaim”
the test site, nearly 3,000
people were arrested. Groups
such as the Nevada Desert
Experience (NDE) and Shundahai
Network continue their work to
shut down the test site and
resist the corporate and
military nuclear industry.
Throughout the 1980’s a
fierce movement of grassroots
resistance and direct action
against uranium mining near the
Grand Canyon had taken shape,
galvanized by the Havasupai,
Hopi, Diné (Navajo), Hualapai
tribes and a Flagstaff group,
Canyon Under Siege. Prayerful
and strategic meetings were held
once a year throughout the 80s.
In 1989 a group known as the
‘Arizona 5′ were charged for
eco-actions including cutting
power-lines to the Canyon
Uranium Mine. Attributable in
some part to the resistance and
but mainly to a sharp drop in
the price of uranium, companies
like Dennison were forced to
shut their mines down.
Mt. Taylor, located on Forest
Service managed lands in New
Mexico between Albuquerque and
Gallup, has also faced the
threat of uranium mining. The
mountain sits upon one of the
richest reservers of uranium ore
in the country, it is held holy
by the Diné, Acoma, Laguna, Zuni
& Hopi Nations. In June 2009
Indigenous Nations and
environmental groups unified to
protect the holy Mountain and
through their efforts Mt. Taylor
was given temporary protection
as a Traditional Cultural
Property.
For 7 years Indigenous People
from throughout the world have
gathered to organize against the
nuclear industry at the
Southwest Indigenous Uranium
Forum on the Acoma Nation.
At the 2006 Indigenous World
Uranium Summit on the Diné
Nation, community organizations
such as Eastern Navajo Diné
Against Uranium Mining (ENDAUM)
joined participants from
Australia, India, Africa,
Pacific Islands, and throughout
North America in issuing a
declaration demanding “a
worldwide ban on uranium mining,
processing, enrichment, fuel
use, and weapons testing and
deployment, and nuclear waste
dumping on native lands.”
Klee Benally (Diné)
is a collective member of
Indigenous Action Media, on the
Board of Directors of the
Shundahai Network, and is a
musician with the group
Blackfire.
Author Mary Sojourner
assisted editing this article.
For further information and
action:
Southwest Research and
Information Center
http://www.sric.org
Shundahai Network
http://www.shundahai.org
Nevada Desert Experience
http://www.nevadadesertexperience.org
The Center for Biological
Diversity
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org
Grand Canyon Trust
http://grandcanyontrust.org
Uranium Watch
http://www.uraniumwatch.org
World Information Service on
Energy: Uranium Project
http://www.wise-uranium.org
Western Mining Action Network
http://wman-info.org
Network Sortir du Nucléaire
http://www.sortirdunucleaire.org
###
Sources:
Addressing Uranium
Contamination in the Navajo
Nation – Map of contaminated
wells
http://epa.gov/region09/superfund/navajo-nation/contaminated-water.html
Tuba City Mill Site
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/nuclear/page/umtra/tubacity_title1.html#_ftn51
EPA summit addresses uranium
cleanup
http://www.gallupindependent.com/2008/08august/081408epa.html
Conservation groups challenge
uranium mining threat to
Colorado River
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2008/sep/30/conservation-groups-challenge-uranium-mining-threa
A peril that dwelt among the
Navajos – L.A. TImes – November
19, 2006
http://articles.latimes.com/2006/nov/19/nation/na-navaj019
Uranium Mining & Milling
http://www.wise-uranium.org/indexu.html#UMMCI
Colorado River Facts
http://www.azhumanities.org/movingwaters/faq.html
Nuclear power inches back
into energy spotlight
http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/energy/environment/2009-03-29-nuclear-power-energy-return_M.htm
AREVA: France’s nuke power
poster child has a money
melt-down
http://acdn.france.free.fr/spip/article.php3?id_article=506&lang=en
Environmental Working Group –
January 2008 – Report: Grand
Canyon Threatened by Approval of
Uranium Mining Activities
http://www.ewg.org/reports/grandcanyon
Shiprock Mill Site
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/nuclear/page/umtra/shiprock_title1.html
Grand Canyon Trust
www.grandcanyontrust.org
The Center for Biological
Diversity
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org
Las Vegas Review: Yucca
Mountain seen as possible
reprocessing site
http://www.lvrj.com/news/yucca-mountain-seen-as-possible-reprocessing-site-83787692.html
Southwest Research and
Information Center
http://www.sric.org
Nuclear Free Future
http://www.nuclear-free.com