The Forest Service has approved a Canadian firm’s plan of operations for a nearly $2 billion open-pit copper mine in the Santa Rita Mountains of southern Arizona.
Toronto-based Hudbay Minerals Inc. plans to extract 112,000 tons of copper from the mine, as well as other minerals, over a span of nearly two decades.
“Rosemont is now a fully permitted, shovel-ready copper project and we look forward to developing this world-class asset,” said Alan Hair, Hudbay’s president and chief executive officer, in a prepared statement issued last week.
Opponents of the project, which include a host of conservation groups as well as area tribes, say the mine would befoul local waterways, threaten Tucson’s water supply and result in a mile-wide pit filled with polluted water.
More than half of the proposed mine, which would cover more than 5,400 acres, would be located on the Coronado National Forest. A lawsuit challenging the project is pending, and the mine’s opponents have pledged further litigation.
Copper mining wrecks any water it comes into contact with. Leaching of chemicals occurs. Wrecks the environment!!