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America’s First Oil Sands Project in Utah to Face Legal Challenges

Featured | Reuters | September 24, 2010

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Through a legal appeal, a pair of local environmental groups are working to overturn a decision earlier this month by John Baza, director of the Utah Division of Oil, Gas and Mining (UDOGM). He upheld a permit approval for a 62-acre mine in the remote Uinta Basin of the Colorado Plateau.

Should the legal option fail, the groups said they are determined to block the project – by whatever “peaceful” means.

“We’re not willing to accept it,” Tim DeChristopher, founder of the Salt Lake City-based environmental group Peaceful Uprising, told SolveClimate News. “If it means we have to blockade the site, we’ll do what we have to do.”

Peaceful Uprising and Living Rivers, a non-profit based in Moab, said they have 10 days from September 17 to appeal to the UDOGM board, and are now working to determine the legal grounds.

“I’m going to try my best to stop it,” John Weisheit, founder of Living Rivers, told SolveClimate News.

One Permit Away

The PR Springs mine — developed by Alberta, Canada-based by Earth Energy Resources (EER) — would produce 2,000 barrels per day by 2013 of coveted and often-maligned bitumen sludge embedded in the sandstone of Utah’s red rock canyon.

Bids to stop EER began over a year ago, when UDOGM first granted the startup approval. But it’s crunch time now. If Mr. Baza’s latest greenlight sticks, EER would need one more “conditional use” permit from officials in Grand County to begin blasting for bitumen.

The mine would straddle the Uintah County-Grand County line. EER already received the okay from Uintah County, an oil and gas mining area.

But Grand County is home of Moab, a tourist town and popular base camp for outdoor enthusiasts. The county council “may be our best hope,” said DeChristopher. The process is expected to take several months.

Ashley Anderson, an activist with Peaceful Uprising who is from Grand County, said he believes the project “could get blocked” there.

“A lot of its economy is based on tourism and having a very positive image of that area,” he told SolveClimate News. “They don’t want people to be viewing the area as a toxic waste dump.”

Oil Sands Slinging

Glenn Snarr, president and CEO of EER, told SolveClimate News that claims of environmental harm are not true. “Those in opposition often use speculative comment or inaccurate facts to raise the public fear,” he said in an email.

To squeeze the tarry oil from stone, EER would use a patented citrus-based chemical solvent that it says would produce no toxic waste. Unlike in Canada’s oil sands operations, its tailings would be made of stackable, “clean” and “saleable” sand, it says, and would not leave behind lakes of leftover water, bitumen and heavy metals that cover 65 square miles of forest and wetlands in Alberta.

Tagged with: tar sands, strip mining, utah, unitah basin