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Teck Coal fined $16M for water quality permit violations in southeastern B.C.

B.C.鈥檚 environmental enforcement branch fines tied to a coal mine in the Elk Valley
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The province has fined Teck Coal over $16 million for water quality permit violations at three coal mining operations in the Elk Valley. B.C. Government handout.

B.C.鈥檚 environmental enforcement branch has fined Teck Coal over $16 million for breaches of water quality permit regulations in the Elk Valley, including a failure to comply with conditions requiring a treatment facility at the Fording River South coal mine be operational by December 2018.

That water treatment facility was finished and operational by July 2022, but the environment ministry鈥檚 enforcement branch levied a $15.5-million fine, using a daily multiplier starting from a March 2021 enforcement deadline and dating back three years.

鈥淭he contravention results in a threat to the integrity of the environment and undermines the basic integrity of the overarching regulatory regime and significantly interferes with the Ministry鈥檚 capacity to protect and conserve the natural environment,鈥 reads the decision.

A water treatment facility at the Fording River South mine operation was proposed and included in a permit following a ministerial order issued in 2013, which required the facility to be operational in five years.

The province鈥檚 enforcement branch determined there was no record of Teck making a permit application to vary the requirement, despite the company saying it notified the province in August 2018 when it realized it wasn鈥檛 going to meet the December deadline.

The adjudication process included submissions from Teck as well as the Ktunaxa Nation Council (KNC), as the nation鈥檚 traditional territory covers the southern interior of B.C. and extends into the United States鈥 pacific northwest region.

鈥淭he KNC highlights the acknowledgement made in these determinations that the mining activities and associated impacts are within Ktunaxa territory, and that KNC will continue to be consulted on the issues that impact our rights and title and these waterways,鈥 said KNC chair Kathryn Teneese in a press release.

鈥淲e have been resolute and consistent in our desire to see improvements in the mine-impacted waters in the Elk Valley, and are glad to see our contributions to this review process were well-considered in the determinations.

鈥淒uring the time frames outlined in the penalty determinations, hundreds of thousands of kilograms of untreated contaminants 鈥 which were required to be treated 鈥 instead entered the Elk and Kootenay rivers.鈥

In a statement, Teck noted the completion of the water treatment facility and touted a $1.2-billion investment in water quality treatment initiatives in the Elk Valley, with an additional $750 million on the way over the next two years.

鈥淭he Fording River Active Water Treatment Facility is now operating as planned and achieving near-complete removal of selenium from treated water,鈥 reads the statement. 鈥淭he delay in completion of this facility was necessary to implement a fix for a water treatment challenge, followed by impacts to construction due to the COVID-19 pandemic.鈥

The company also noted it has constructed capacity to treat and remove selenium from up to 77.5-million litres of water per day.

The total amount of administrative penalties also includes additional sanctions at other coal mining operations in the region.

The company was hit with nearly $1 million for exceeding monthly and daily selenium and nitrate levels at Line Creek operations over a three-year period. A $216,000 fine was also levied for excess monthly and daily selenium and nitrate levels at the Greenhills mine on various occasions between March 2020 to February 2021.

Water quality concerns in the Elk Valley have been a long-running issue for the Ktunaxa Nation and environmental groups concerned about the selenium impacts to aquatic fish species and the downstream ecosystem effects.

Nearly two years ago, Teck Coal was fined a record $60 million related to selenium and calcite contamination of Elk Valley rivers nearly a decade ago.

The Ktunaxa Nation Council is also petitioning the federal government to participate in an International Joint Commission, an entity dedicated to investigating and resolving trans-water boundary disputes, amid concerns over water pollution in the Kootenay watershed and Koocanusa Reservoir.



trevor.crawley@cranbrooktownsman.com

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Trevor Crawley

About the Author: Trevor Crawley

Trevor Crawley has been a reporter with the Cranbrook Townsman and Black Press in various roles since 2011.
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