By MATTHEW BROWN
Associated Press
PRAY, Mont. — U.S. officials on Monday blocked new mining claims outside Yellowstone National Park as the Obama administration races in its last days to keep industry out of natural and environmentally sensitive areas.
Mining claims on more than 30,000 acres north of the nation’s first national park will be prohibited for at least two years while a long-term ban is considered, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell said during a visit to Montana’s scenic Paradise Valley.
Details were obtained by The Associated Press in advance of the formal announcement.
Interior officials last week blocked new oil drilling in the Arctic Ocean and cancelled 25 oil and gas leases in western Colorado and 15 in northwestern Montana.
Republicans and industry representatives have criticized the administration’s eleventh-hour actions to limit development and promised to seek their reversal once Obama leaves office
The latest move came after a pair of gold exploration proposals north of Yellowstone drew strong opposition from l business owners, environmentalists and Montana elected officials.
Jewell hiked a rocky trail near one of the mining sites, beneath the snow-capped peaks of the Absaroka Mountains. She said she hoped the temporary ban would discourage the projects’ sponsors and shield Yellowstone and surrounding areas from development.
The two-year prohibition would not explicitly block the pending proposals, both of which involve private lands. However, Jewell and other government officials said it could make large-scale mining more difficult if the projects were expanded onto public lands.
“This is right on the doorstep of Yellowstone National Park, one of the most amazing places in the world,” Jewell said. “It needs to be part of a larger ecosystem and this forest is part of that ecosystem. Mining will damage that. It will damage the ability of the animals to migrate. It will impact potentially the watershed. It could impact the geothermal features.”
Recreation and other activities still will be allowed in the area.
A Canadian company, Lucky Minerals, has applied to the Montana Department of Environmental Quality to explore for gold and other minerals north of Yellowstone near Emigrant, Montana. Another company, Spokane, Washington-based Crevice Mining Group, is seeking permission to explore for gold near Jardine, just over Yellowstone’s northern boundary.
Lucky Minerals Vice President Shaun Dykes said he was “disgusted” with Monday’s announcement and said he’d received no advance notice from federal officials. He said the administration’s action could scare off potential investors who can easily steer their money to mining projects elsewhere.
“They’re sending a huge message to mining and exploration (companies), saying you’re not welcome in Montana,” Dykes told the AP in a telephone interview. “That area has huge potential value and we’re going to work with local mineral owners to help them fight this.”
Dykes said the reserves his company is targeting hold up to 10 million ounces of gold. If Lucky Mineral’s plans get stopped by the government’s actions, Dykes said the company would be entitled to compensation for its foregone profits.
U.S. Sen. Jon Tester had urged the administration to intervene to help stop mining in the area. The Montana Democrat said following Jewell’s announcement that he would introduce legislation in the next Congress to make the prohibition on new mining claims permanent.
The Interior Department ban can extend a maximum of only 20 years, officials said.
Both of the proposed exploration sites have a history of mining. However, in recent decades they’ve become more closely associated with the natural amenities of Yellowstone and the surrounding Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness.
Michael Werner, a mining engineer with Crevice Mining Group, said he wouldn’t know how the agency’s action would impact the company’s exploration plans until more details were revealed.
The opponents argue that mining would industrialize wild areas populated by grizzly bears, bighorn sheep and other wildlife; harm streams that drain into the Yellowstone River; and dampen tourism, a mainstay of the region’s economy.
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