🚨 January Newsletter Recap: Who really benefits from “critical minerals” in B.C.?
Governments worldwide are racing to secure lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, and rare earth elements — not just for clean energy, but also for military, industrial, and economic purposes.
The guide:
✅ Debunks misleading claims about "critical minerals"
✅ Supports communities and First Nations under mining pressure
✅ Highlights environmental, social, and rights impacts
✅ Provides tools for advocacy & evidence-based decision-making
🧵 (4/5)
➡️ What needs to happen next:
🩺 Long-term health monitoring and support
🛡️ Stronger protections and accountability for legacy mines
⚖️ Reform outdated mining laws to prevent future harms
#HealthJustice#MiningLegacy#ReformBCMining#BCPoli
(5/5)
📢 New reporting from Amanda Follett Hosgood in @TheTyee examines the long shadow of asbestos mining in B.C. — and what happens when a company town disappears.
📰 A Mining Town Scattered, and Asbestos to the Wind
🔗 https://t.co/RJ5b7kYHmj
#Cassiar#Asbestos#BCMining
🧵(1/5)
📄 Cassiar Mine was also listed in our 2025 Dirty Dozen report, highlighting gaps in how mining impacts are tracked, regulated, and addressed in B.C.
🔗 https://t.co/eSlIqk2Qjm
(4/5)
📰 Mining law in BC still ignores Indigenous consent. Our new op-ed with @AmnestyNow in Canada's National Observer explains how UNDRIP alignment can protect rights, the environment, and certainty for the mining sector: https://t.co/hx76jduDFd
⚠️ BC approved the Mount Milligan mine expansion, raising water & environmental concerns.
The Nak’azdli Whut’en First Nation is stepping up Indigenous-led monitoring to protect watersheds.
Read the full story from the National Observer: https://t.co/lc66wPjtme
"What Happened to the 'Rule of Law'?" Amanda Follett Hosgood examines how the phrase was used during the Wet’suwet’en pipeline conflict — and how politicians now invoke it differently when courts side with First Nations. Thoughtful analysis in @TheTyee: https://t.co/XZTjinrxzZ
Hope is not abstract—it’s built through action. As we look to the new year, this corridor offers a chance—to protect what inspires us and ensure northwest B.C. remains wild and thriving for generations.
Read our latest blog on this vital Corridor: https://t.co/O66MWQuIYL
(8/8)
What’s needed: Indigenous leadership at the center, legally protected conservation areas, clear land-use planning, and decisions rooted in evidence and respect.
(7/8)