Trump admin set to approve Arizona land swap for mine opposed by Native
Americans
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[December 07, 2020]
By Ernest Scheyder
(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's
outgoing administration is set to approve a controversial land swap
later this month that would give Rio Tinto Ltd and partners more than
2,400 acres (9.7 square kilometers) to build an Arizona copper mine,
even though the project would destroy religious and cultural sites
sacred to Native Americans.
Tribal leaders and other critics allege that the U.S. government is
fast-tracking the environmental review process before Trump is replaced
by President-elect Joe Biden next month, charges the government and Rio
Tinto deny.
The land swap, outlined in U.S. government documents, reflects the
tension between the increasing global attention on the rights of
indigenous peoples and the need to boost metals production to power
electric vehicles and reduce global carbon emissions. Copper is used to
make solar panels, wind turbines and EV batteries.
The San Carlos Apache Tribe says the mine, if built, would destroy land
considered the home of religious deities and sites used for tribal
ceremonies, including one to celebrate teenage girls who have come of
age.
"This is about religious freedom," said Terry Rambler, chairman of the
San Carlos Apache Tribe. "For me and our people, it's a fight not only
for today, but for our children and grandchildren."
Rio and partner BHP Group Plc have sought for years to access the
underground copper deposit in the Tonto National Forest, which abuts the
San Carlos reservation.
A last-minute addition to a 2014 Pentagon funding bill signed by former
President Barack Obama allowed Rio to exchange land it owns near the
forest for land above the copper reserve, with the caveat that the swap
could not occur until an environmental study was published.
The U.S. Forest Service has changed its publication estimate several
times. Last April, the agency said it would come in 2021. Three months
later, that was changed to December 2020 because the agency said it has
been completing its review faster than expected.
The Forest Service referred requests for comment to a Dec. 1 statement
where it said the plan for December publication "does not reflect an
acceleration."
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Roger Featherstone of the Arizona Mine Reform Coalition points to
the Resolution Copper mine in the Oak Flat area near Superior,
Arizona, June 13, 2017. In a federal land exchange, Resolution
Copper acquired control over 2,400 acres in and around Oak Flat and
plans to extract ore from deep below the surface. REUTERS/Nancy
Wiechec
The San Carlos Apache tribe have worked with mining companies in the
past, most recently selling water to a mine owned by
Freeport-McMoRan Inc, though the tribe said that was a decision they
made themselves, not one decided by the U.S. government, as with the
land swap.
Rio said that its Resolution Copper subsidiary, which is developing
the mine, has not tried to expedite the permit process.
"The project is not being 'fast-tracked'," the company said, adding
that if the land swap occurs, the Apache will be able to visit the
land for the next few decades.
Rio faced criticism earlier this year for destroying indigenous
sites in Australia. Native Americans say the mining giant is poised
to make the same mistake in Arizona.
Rio said it has consulted with the San Carlos and other Arizona
tribes about preserving other culturally significant locations,
including Apache Leap, a rock cliff where in the late 19th Century
Apaches jumped to their deaths to avoid capture by U.S. troops.
Biden was overwhelmingly supported in last month's U.S. presidential
election by Native Americans across Arizona, exit polling data show.
Tribal leaders are already lobbying the incoming president to block
construction permits for the mine.
Rambler, the tribal chairman, said Biden's transition team is
considering his request to meet with the president-elect.
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder; editing by Amran Abocar and
Marguerita Choy)
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