N.W.T. board approves rare earth mine - Action News
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N.W.T. board approves rare earth mine

The Mackenzie Valley Review Board has approved Avalon Rare Metals' Nechalacho project, located about 100 kilometres east of Yellowknife.

Environmental assessment report recommends measures to protect water and wildlife

NWT board approves rare earths mine

11 years ago
Duration 2:32
CBC's Kate Kyle reports from Yellowknife

The Mackenzie Valley Review Board has approved Avalon Rare Metals' Nechalacho project, located about 100 kilometres east of Yellowknife.

Avalon wants to build a mine at Thor Lake and a secondary processing facility at Pine Point. The company plans to ship chemical concentrate by rail to a refinery in the United States.

In a news release, theboard saidit concludedthe projectis likely tocause significant adverse environmental impacts, but the impacts wouldbe minimized bymeasures set out by the board.

They include:

  • ensuring the water released from the project does not cause significant impacts
  • requiring a wildlife and wildlife habitat protection planand monitoring
  • the signing of a socio-economic agreement with the Government of Northwest Territories before construction begins

The company says the property isone of the largest undeveloped deposits of rare earth elements in the world.

Avalon president Don Bubar says the project could one day put the territory on the global map.

"[Rare earth elements] are vital to many, many new technologiesmodern electronics, energy efficiency in automobiles. We're going to need more and more of them and there are relatively few [deposits] outside China."

Avalon says the project could create up to 300 jobs.

But there is some opposition. Last February, Yellowknives Dene passed a motion saying they don't support "development of the Thor Lake project on Chief Drygeese lands," citing a lack of consultation.

A feasibility study released in April showed Nechalachowould cost $1.5 billion dollars to mine.

The company also needs to find a buyer to bring the product to market.

The federal government will have the final say if the mine is approved to go ahead.