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Can the US go green without destroying sacred Native Lands? – Mother Jones
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Can the US go green without destroying sacred Native Lands? – Mother Jones

Can the US Go Green Without Destroying Sacred Native Lands? – Mother Jones

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The sun is shining already dipped behind southeast Arizona’s dusty blue Mescal Mountains, but for sisters Naelyn and Nizhoni Pike, huddled by a fire shooting sparks into the darkening desert, excitement lies ahead. They will join a dozen other runners on the first leg a fast 55-mile relay. Over the course of three days, they’ll traverse this arid valley where their ancestors were once ImprisonedThey then climb through the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation which they call their home, and into Tonto National Forest. This is where they consider their most sacred place, Naelyn has. she feels “free to be Apache”: Chi’chil Bildagoteel, an Apache name describing a place where acorns grow.

The Oak Flat Run is not a race but a protest in support of this beautiful and rugged patch of high desert mesa. The sisters are running because they hope it can help stop a mining company called ­Resolution Copper from wiping it off the map.

Preparations started months ago, but as Naelyn, 22, explains over the thumping drums of a blessing ceremony, “it’s today where I feel like it really begins, the spirituality part of it.”

The sisters and their fellow Western Apaches go to Oak Flat to honor their Ga’an, the guardians or messengers between their creator and the physical world, who dwell there. This mesa is also situated on a copper deposit that is so strong that miners can’t even touch it. brag it could meet a quarter of the United States’ needs. Copper is an important currency in the push towards electric cars and renewable energy. As copper demand rises, so will the thorny questions about what will be destroyed for green energy. Oak Flat, according to analysts, is The The most promising new source for copper in the country. But if Resolution Copper can pull off a plan that would turn Oak Flat into a 2-mile-wide crater, Nizhoni, 21, says, “it’s gonna leave a hole in the Earth and a hole in all our hearts.”

It’s almost time for the run to begin. Naelyn and Nizhoni’s grandfather, Wendsler Nosie Sr., the founder of a group called Apache StrongholdThe ringleader draws the runners in tight circles around the fire. They’ll cover more than 10 miles tonight, passing off a staff adorned with dangling eagle feathers. Nosie’s 8-year-old grand­daughter, Wendslyn, a girl so fast she’s won races against high schoolers, will start. “Let’s go!” Nosie shouts, as Naelyn and Nizhoni jump into the bed of a brawny pickup truck that will accompany the runners. As the moon rises above the horizon, I see a rose-gold moon. Then Wendslyn is gone, her fuchsia sneakers flying, and her waist-long ponytail bobbing away as she disappears into night.

For centuries, Western Apaches have considered Oak Flat a portal to their creator, its springs holy and the acorns from its old-growth Emory oak trees a source of sustenance. They collect medicinal plants there and use the mesa’s meadows and overlooks for their most important rituals, including the sunrise ceremony that marks a girl’s maturation into adulthood. During Nizhoni’s ceremony, when she was 13, her godfather painted her with white clay taken from Oak Flat so that she represented the “white painted woman who emerged from the Earth in our creation stories,” she explains. “You’re covered in paint and dancing, your eyes are closed, you’re trying to breathe through your nose, but for me, it’s like I just gave all my trust into the ceremony,” she remembers. Her godmother then wiped the clay from her eyes. “From that moment, you no longer see the world as a girl—you see it as a woman.”

The San Carlos Apaches aren’t the only ones to revere Oak Flat; many other tribes consider it hallowed ground. This rare riparian landscape is a sanctuary in a sea that punishes desert. It also houses several endangered and threatened species. Southwest willow flycatchers, hedgehog cacti, and ocelots. Rock climbers and trail runners love the steep canyons and granite boulders. In 1955, President Eisenhower designated 760 acres of Oak Flat as public land to shield it from mining; during Nixon’s presidency, it landed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Prospectors discovered a vast amount of copper in 1995, despite these protections. Rio Tinto, the British Australian mining conglomerate that is Resolution Copper’s majority owner, began a decade-long lobbying campaign to access the ore. In 2014, minutes ahead of a must-pass defense bill deadline, John McCain and Jeff Flake, then Arizona’s Republican ­senators, inserted a rider allowing Resolution Copper to trade acreage elsewhere in the state for Oak Flat. (Rio Tinto affiliates had ­donated to McCain’s campaigns, and Flake had once worked as a lobbyist for the company, the New York Times reported.) The Forest Service published a draft of an environmental impact statement in January 2021 just as Trump’s administration was about to leave office.

Apache Stronghold sued to challenge the transfer of the mine and their religious freedom and treaty rights. While a district court judge ruled against them, he did hold that “the Government’s mining plans…will have a devastating effect on the Apache people’s religious practices.” The San Carlos tribe and a coalition of environmental and mining reform groups filed separate lawsuits targeting the environmental impact statement. The dispute caught the eye of the newly elected president, and on March 1, the Forest Service rescinded the statement, temporarily halting the mine’s progress.

Although President Biden indicated that he would, ProtectHe is also vocal about public lands. jump-starting a green economy—a quest that will require new sources of critical minerals. “Decarbonization is going to be much more copper intensive than people realize,” says Chris Berry, an energy metals analyst, with use spiking in batteries, grid infrastructure, and wind turbines. Electric cars are the only source of demand. Up to four timesCopper consumption is expected to grow from half a billion tons today to 3.3 million tons by 2030. “Copper is the new green,” the Resolution Copper website states.

Just as the United States’ appetite for copper grows, foreign suppliers of the metal have become less reliable due to under-investment and labor strife. For instance, Chile, the world’s leading copper producer, is Rewriting its constitutionA new royalty regime will likely be enacted to increase prices. Berry says these changes could discourage investors and delay a supply of new copper “just at the time that we’re seeing exponential demand for those end-uses that require copper, whether its electrical infrastructure or electric vehicles.”

It’s perhaps for that reason that Resolution Copper’s website boasts that “a steady home-grown copper supply will be a competitive advantage for US manufacturing.” After Russia invaded Ukraine, a group of Republican senators, citing copper, took the opportunity to Encourage Biden to “expedite the approval of domestic mines, including mines on federal land.”

Berry also notes that the mining industry is reckoning with demands that it focus more on mines’ potential effects on biodiversity and community health. The industry will have to clean up and adopt. new standards, Berry says, “wouldn’t it make sense to have the material mined somewhere where you can actively monitor it and track it, as opposed to going to some jungle in Indonesia?”

However, Resolution Copper’s critics doubt that the mine will really be a boon to the domestic supply chains. A Resolution spokesperson says the company “is looking to process” Oak Flat’s output in the United States. However, domestic smelting capacities are limited so many companies may not be able to process Oak Flat’s output. CriticsIt is possible that the copper concentrate could be shipped from China. (State-owned Chinalco is Rio Tinto’s largest shareholder.) “Let nobody be under any illusion that this copper is staying in the US,” says Randi Spivak, public lands program director at the Center for ­Biological Diversity, which helped file a LawsuitStop the land transfer in 2021

Resolution claims that the mine would create 3,700 jobs. However, opposition to Resolution’s approach has been stiffened. In 2020, Rio Tinto It exploded 46,000-year-old ­aboriginal rock shelters in Western Australia in pursuit of iron ore, sparking global outrage. Resolution plans to use block cave mining to extract iron ore from Oak Flat. This is a destructive method that involves drilling between 4,000 to 7,000 feet underground at its base to cause it to collapse and eventually cave in.

The massive project will also threaten to deplete groundwater, as the Southwest is facing a historic megadrought. James Wells, a hydrologist commissioned by the San Carlos Apache, has flatly concluded that “Arizona does not have enough water to accommodate this large new demand.” (Resolution’s spokesperson disagreed, claiming the company has stored enough to sustain operations “for decades.”) Wells Tell CongressIn April 2021, the mine would consume what a 140,000-person city needs for 50 years. “The scale of this project is hard to fathom,” he cautioned.

As to suggestions that the mine’s copper could boost decarbonization, Naelyn wasn’t buying it: “It would cause a huge crater, two miles wide, as deep as the Eiffel Tower,” she says. “How can you tell me that’s going green?”

Apache Stronghold’s LawsuitNow, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals sits with the government. A decision could be made any day. The government’s argument in the case so far has been “extremely anti–Native ­American,” says Luke Goodrich, one of the group’s attorneys. “They take the position that the federal government has carte blanche to destroy any Native American sacred site on federal land.”

In ­February, the Biden administration began a round of consultations with tribal leaders, something that should have started years ago, according to Rep. Raúl ­Grijalva (D-Ariz.), who last year introduced the Save Oak Flat ActTo permanently protect the area. “I hope it has an impact,” he says. “We’re dealing with a mining lobby that is powerful and has members [in Congress] that are not only supportive, but do their bidding.”

On the final day of the run, 18-year-old Aidan Parr, an enrolled member of the Coeur d’Alene tribe, jogs more than 26 miles, traversing the Super­stition Mountains and passing cows and saguaro cacti. He and a few hundred other supporters convene for a closing event Saturday evening at Oak Flat, with the Apache Stronghold ­faction, members of several other tribes, and representatives of the ­Reverend William ­Barber’s Poor People’s ­Campaign joining from all four cardinal directions.

Parr and classmates from his high school’s Native American club have met with Arizona legislators to dissuade them from backing the mine, he tells me on the phone as he recovers from his first marathon. And, he says, “considering it’s a prayer run, we’re hoping a higher power gets involved.”

Earlier that morning, Naelyn and Nizhoni meet up with the Apache Stronghold contingent in the parking lot of the San Carlos Reservation’s skatepark. The sun has just begun to illuminate the murals lining the park’s walls, including one that reads “You’re skating on Native land.” Nosie faces 15 runners, who are standing in two parallel lines. “We have a big day ahead of us,” he tells them. They’ll be running out of the reservation and into the “copper triangle,” which includes a string of towns and open-pit mines that line the road that snakes to Oak Flat.

Running through these towns might help “wake up these people” to the reality that no resources are infinite, Naelyn had said to me the night before. Nizhoni chimed in: “It’s to open their eyes that this isn’t just about the Apaches, it’s about everybody. This is a bigger cause than they think.”

Aidan Parr (right), running with Cooper Davis, his Brophy College Prep high-school teacher, towards Oak Flat.

Shaun Marcus Price

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