Coal company Teck fined $60M for contaminating B.C. rivers
FERNIE, B.C. — It’s being called the largest-ever penalty assessed under the Canadian Fisheries Act. Teck Coal in the East Kootenays has been fined 60-million dollars, for contaminating waterways in southern British Columbia.
A subsidiary of Teck Resources, Teck Coal pleaded guilty to two charges of releasing selenium and calcite into the Elk and Fording Rivers between January and December 2012. The fine is the equivalent of $80,000 per offence per day.
A total of $58 million of the $60 million will be directed to the Government of Canada’s Environmental Damages Fund and will be used to support projects that benefit Canada’s natural environment. The remaining $2 million are fines which will be directed to the Receiver General.
A comprehensive investigation by Environment and Climate Change Canada, revealed that Teck Coal Limited’s operations were depositing deleterious coal mine waste rock leachate into the upper Fording River. In 2012, this leachate from Teck Coal Limited’s Fording River Operations and Greenhills Operations coal mines deposited selenium and calcite into the upper Fording River.