Site icon Sustainability Awakening

The Growing Threat of Canadian Mining Pollution to U.S. Waters

Here is an extensive list of relevant search tags for the article, separated by commas: mining, water pollution, environmental concerns, water contamination, Canadian mines, Montana, lakes, rivers, fish populations, fish deformities, open-pit mines, Teck Resources, selenium, selenium poisoning, coal mining, mining waste, aquatic life, human health, health risks, contaminated fish, tribal fishing rights, native tribes, Indigenous groups, transboundary pollution, International Joint Commission, Kootenai River, Lake Koocanusa, Montana standards, British Columbia, Elk Valley mines, Indigenous lands, mountaintop removal mining, Ktunaxa Nation, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, burbot restoration, fish declines, fisheries management, environmental oversight, regulatory failures, bilateral talks, water quality standards, toxic chemicals, cadmium, sulfates, nitrates, metals mining, coal mining pollution, environmental justice, environmental racism,

Introduction

Selenium and other toxic chemicals flowing from Canadian mines into U.S. lakes and rivers are raising urgent concerns over impacts to fish, wildlife and human health.

For decades, enormous open-pit coal mines owned by Teck Resources in southern British Columbia’s Elk Valley have leached contaminants like selenium into waterways that cross the border into Montana and Idaho.

Selenium Poisoning Threatens Fish Populations

Concerns Over Human Health Impacts

Lack of Regulatory Oversight

Tribal Groups: Mining Pollutes Sacred Waters

Calls for International Oversight

Exit mobile version