Pumping continues at damaged B.C. tailings pond - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:45 PM | Calgary | -11.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Pumping continues at damaged B.C. tailings pond

Officials are bringing in more pumps to drain water on a tailings pond near Salmo, B.C., after the pond's dam breached earlier this week.
Pumps are draining excess water from the tailings pond lake before a possible major dam failure, which could contaminate nearby rivers and drinking water. (Bob Keating/CBC)

Officials are bringing in more pumps to drain water on a tailings pond near Salmo, B.C., after the pond's dam breached earlier this week.

Now, officials with the Regional District of Central Kootenay worry the dam could give way.

"We have a partial loss of the dam that holds the tailings pond," said Uli Wolf, the district's manager of environmental services.

"A complete and fast breach would allow these materials to rush out of here beyond our control,"

Three pumps have been running around the clock since Wednesday night, whenheavy rain destabilized the land around the old Hudsons Bay mine site. The regional district said it hoped to have two additional pumps installed Thursday.

The region saw a staggering amount of rain in the month of June. It was the rainiest June on record, according to meteorologist Ron Lakeman.

Wolf says the tailings pond just couldn't hold the increased pressure from the extra water.

"We are breaking every record in the books, so this is beyond design capacity that is normally predicted."

The best estimate is that there are 200,000 cubic meters of tailings in the pond.

If the dam bursts, it could flood across Highway 3 and onto the farm Susan Lifely rents, downstream.

"Yeah, I am nervous but I am hoping everything will just hang in there with the sunshine. We don't need any more rain," she said.

Once enough water is pumped out of the tailings pond, officials say they plan to reinforce the dam.

With files from the CBC's Bob Keating