U.S. study finds Canadian mining toxin in American waters; treatment ‘a small dent’
A new American study has confirmed southeastern British Columbia coal mines are contaminating waters shared by Canada and the U.S., adding the miner’s attempts to remove selenium from wastewater aren’t making much difference to the amount flowing south.
“It’s making a small dent,” said Meryl Storb of the United States Geological Survey, lead author of the newly published study.
“However, the water treatment is much less successful at reducing the total annual mass moving downstream.”
Selenium, an element found in coal deposits that is toxic to fish, has been a long-running source of conflict between B.C., Canada and the U.S. government. The contaminant is flowing from steelmaking coal mines in B.C.’s Elk Valley, where mining has gone on for decades.