Moscow worried about Norway’s decision to dump mining waste into Arctic fjord
Norway’s go-ahead to controversial copper mine in Repparfjord on the Barents Sea coast causes pollution concerns for maritime environment important also for Russia.
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It was Minister of Natural Resources and ecology, Dmitry Kobylkin, who raised the question at Tuesday’s meeting with Norway’s Environmental Minister Ola Elvestuen. The two met in Moscow for the mixed Russian-Norwegian Commission of Environmental Cooperation.
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«I explained that a sea repository will not have consequences for Russia,» says Environmental Minister Ola Elvestuen to the Barents Observer on phone from Moscow.
It was last week, the Norwegian Government approved mining of copper at Repparfjord in Finnmark including a permission to dump tailings from the mine to the sea floor of the fjord.
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Elvestuen says the waste will stay at the repository area under water and will not spread to the the marine environment in the Barents Sea and therefor can’t have negative impact for the Russian side.
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Repparfjord is in Kvalsund, an hour drive from Hammerfest.p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 11.0px Helvetica; color: #000000; -webkit-text-stroke: #000000}span.s1 {font-kerning: none} Norway and Russia share the valuable stock of cod and other spices in the Barents Sea.
In Northern Norway, the Sami Parliament says the decision to open the mine overrides Sami interests, both in regards to fishing in the fjord and for reindeer herding in the area of exploration.
«We are very critical to sea deposits because the ocean, fisheries and sea food industry is so important for all of us living up north,» President of the Sami Parliament, Aili Keskitalo, told the Barents Observer.
Environmental groups are mobilizing for civil disobedience to stop dumping of tailings to the fjord. So far, more than 3,000 people have signed up for taking part in the demonstrations up north when the mining starts.
Minister Dmitry Kobylkin has previously said it is worrying that Norway, as one of very few countries in the world, continues to grant permission to dump mining waste at sea.
«I know the position of the Norwegian side about the “safety” of such “recycling” of waste. Nevertheless, it is significant that during the last meeting of the International Union for Conservation of Nature, Norway, along with Turkey, were the only 53 participants who voted against the international ban on dumping mining waste at sea. Of course, we are worried about the situation,» Dmitry Kobylkin said after the last meeting with Ola Elvestuen, a press release by the ministry reads.