Does Your Mine's Wastewater Contain Too Much Arsenic? No Problem - AZ Govt Will Simply Raise The Legal Limit!
A monitoring well at the site of a uranium mine operating in a national monument nine miles from the Grand Canyons south rim has been detecting rising arsenic levels since 2025. Four times, those arsenic levels exceeded the Arizona wells permitted alert levels.
Now, the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) is approving an application from the company, Energy Fuels Resources Inc., to raise both the wells alert levels for arsenic and the limit of the toxic metal in the aquifer detected at the well by 10 percent in a modification to the mines Aquifer Protection Program permit. The approved changes would raise the alert level from 0.04 milligrams per liter (mg/L) to 0.05 mg/L and increase the allowable arsenic concentration from 0.05 mg/L to 0.055 mg/L.
Local tribes and environmentalists say the decision threatens the regions water quality and the publics ability to be alerted to groundwater issues at the mine. Independent hydrogeologists who spoke to Inside Climate News say the approval ignores scientific evidence the contamination could spread across the regional aquifer around the Grand Canyon, a possibility that needs more study before a decision is made to raise the permissible levels of arsenic.
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Recent research led by Karlstrom and Crossey on the Grand Canyons groundwater system documented a dye tracer quickly traveling great distances between the upper Coconino aquifer and the deeper, regional Redwall-Mauv aquifer, showing that they are connected in many parts of the region. The study brought renewed attention to the possibility of groundwater contamination at the mine site and led to reviews by the U.S. Geological Survey and Environmental Protection Agency, which found more research is needed to understand if the mine site poses a threat to the regions water quality. The water at the monitoring well is far beyond the EPAs safe drinking limits for contaminants like arsenic, lead and uranium. If it spreads to the deeper, regional aquifer that many communities rely on, it could pose significant health threats, experts, environmentalists and local tribes warned.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/10072026/arizona-raises-uranium-mine-contaminant-limits/