A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, MAY 26, 2022 OREGON New Oregon mining boom could be a bust for sage grouse BY BRADLEY W. PARKS Oregon Public Broadcasting McDERMITT, Ore. — Ka- tie Fite crouched behind some waist-high sagebrush, and her dog Bell nestled in the plant’s cozy cavity to shield from howling winds. It was the first Saturday in April, peak mating season for sage grouse on a remote stretch of the Oregon-Nevada border. From where Fite and her dog sat, they could see more than a dozen male grouse displaying their tail feathers and issuing their signature zip-popping call to bring all the girls to the yard. All around the lek — the flat, open areas where sage grouse congregate during mat- ing season — were wooden stakes marking where mining companies may one day scrape away this crucial habitat to get at the minerals contained in the cake-soft earth of the Mc- Dermitt Caldera. The old supervolcano strad- dling the state line is laced with some of the highest concentra- tions of lithium in the United States, making it a prime tar- get for miners and prospectors looking to feed a growing hun- ger for batteries to store renew- able energy and power electric vehicles. It’s also some of the coun- try’s best remaining sage grouse habitat, which has de- clined precipitously in the past century. “There’s still hope for sage grouse here, unlike many other areas,” said Fite, who’s monitored sage grouse for decades and now serves as public lands director for the conservation group Wildlands Defense. “But it’ll be a death knell for sage grouse out here if industrial mega-mining for lithium takes place.” Just a few years ago, the Mc- Dermitt Caldera was off-lim- its to new mining claims to protect sage grouse. But rule changes under the Trump ad- ministration opened the door to extractive industry, and in- dustry walked in. Multiple companies have staked mining claims in south- east Oregon and are issuing ness. The industry has re- sponded. A wooden stake marks the Jindalee Resources mining claim amid a sea of sagebrush in the McDermitt Caldera on the Oregon-Nevada border Fri- day, April 1, 2022. The caldera is labeled by the federal govern- ment as the best of the best re- maining sage grouse habitat. Jindalee currently holds the only permit to explore for lith- ium in Oregon, but at least two other companies — Aurora En- ergy Metals and ACME Lith- ium — have nearby claims they say could hold promising lith- ium deposits. Advocates for the West chal- lenged the Trump administra- tion’s decision to abandon the Nick Myatt/Oregon Department of Fish and WIldlife, File mineral withdrawal in court Sage grouse males inflate their air sacs during the spring mating ritual. and won. As a result, the BLM is again considering a proposal Fite say the damage to sage torney for the environmen- bold statements about the re- to block new mining claims in grouse habitat has already tal law firm Advocates for gion’s lithium prospects to prime sage grouse habitat, but the West, said the decision lure investors. Meanwhile, the started with exploratory it’s unclear how doing so now drilling tearing up patches of to keep sage grouse off the Biden administration is mak- would affect existing claims in ing a big push to build a stand- sagebrush, and that any new endangered species list was southeast Oregon. mining would be devastating. predicated on preventing new alone battery supply chain in Stellberg said every bit of “This would represent a to- mines on those acres, called the U.S., further filling the min- habitat disrupted by mining tal, tragic loss,” Fite said. “And I sagebrush focal areas. ing industry’s sails. or exploration, especially in believe it has to be stopped.” “The concern is that if you The U.S. is heavily reliant well-preserved areas like the allow development to go for- on foreign imports of raw ma- McDermitt Caldera, sends sage ward that there aren’t actually terials used in batteries, in- Open for business grouse closer to Endangered cluding lithium. That leaves Sage grouse need sagebrush enough concrete mitigation ac- Species Act protection. tions to protect the bird in ar- the supply chain, and thus the to survive. They use the plant “If this is where we’re going country’s transition off fossil for food, brooding and shelter. eas that are being mined,” Stell- to be allowing mines to go for- fuels, vulnerable to geopoliti- The birds do best in areas with berg said. ward, then we’re left with low- Interior Secretary Sally Jew- er-quality habitat that just can’t cal conflicts like the U.S. trade continuous, abundant sage- ell, under President Barack war with China and Russia’s brush and minimal to no hu- sustain the number of birds Obama, proposed the mineral that we need to allow the spe- war on Ukraine. man disturbance. “Clearly, the U.S. needs Excessive livestock grazing, withdrawal. That triggered a cies to persist,” Stellberg said. guaranteed domestic supply,” oil and gas production, resi- two-year period during which said Lindsay Dudfield, ex- dential development, wildfire sagebrush focal areas were Drilling’s early toll ecutive director of Jindalee and mining have chewed away off-limits to new mining claims Fite slung a camera over Resources Limited, an Aus- about half of the sage grouse while the full proposal under- her shoulder and set out on tralian company exploring a habitat the American West his- went environmental review. ranch roads to get an up- large lithium deposit in Ore- torically supported. But President Donald close look at the Jindalee gon’s Malheur County. “And Population declines sent the Trump’s first Interior secretary, mining claim, which covers so you’ve seen bipartisan sup- birds hurtling toward the fed- Ryan Zinke, made quick work thousands of acres on the Or- port for the development of eral endangered species list of unraveling the sage grouse egon side of the caldera north critical minerals projects in before 2015 when U.S. govern- plans when he took office. of McDermitt Creek. the United States growing.” ment agencies adopted alterna- Under Zinke, the Bureau of The company drilled 11 Companies touting south- tive plans to try to save them. Land Management allowed the holes in December to try to east Oregon’s mineral poten- Among other protections, temporary mineral withdrawal increase its confidence in the tial, including Jindalee, are the sage grouse plans rec- to expire and abandoned the amount of lithium contained in several years away at the ear- ommended a “mineral with- environmental review of a per- its claim. So far, Jindalee esti- liest from developing mines drawal” to block new mining manent mineral withdrawal in mates it has the second-largest if they get to that point at claims on 10 million acres of 2017, saying “future mining is known lithium deposit in the all. Any mine would require the best remaining habitat in not a significant threat to sage United States. state and federal approval that the country — including the grouse habitat.” Despite extensive mapping could face legal challenges. McDermitt Caldera. That decision opened the and monitoring by state and But conservationists like Sarah Stellberg, a staff at- McDermitt Caldera for busi- federal agencies marking the area as key habitat for sage grouse, Lindsay Dudfield says Jindalee is not aware of birds lekking on its claim. “We understand that there are no sage grouse leks on our claims,” Dudfield said in an email, adding that the company still does not drill in winter or spring to mini- mize impact on breeding. Signs of sage grouse are ev- erywhere in the claim area, from stray feathers poking out of the dirt to piles of the birds’ Cheeto-like scat. Not to mention the nearby leks. Fite says neither Jindalee nor the government agencies regulat- ing its activity have taken the time to look for sage grouse on the claim. Over the course of multi- ple visits, Fite has documented new roadlets created by heavy machinery, piles of dead sage- brush and trash. She called the damage from exploratory drill- ing “classic habitat fragmenta- tion” that, even if legal and per- mitted, is terrible for the sage grouse. Breaks in the continu- ous carpet of sagebrush can, for instance, invite fire-prone inva- sive plants like cheatgrass. “They’re gonna destroy the habitat in the exploration alone before they even get to the mining,” Fite said. Fite faults the BLM for al- lowing mineral exploration to go forward in such sensi- tive habitat when the agency’s charge under the 2015 federal sage grouse plans is to protect the birds. BLM spokesperson Brian Hires confirmed in an email that Jindalee’s claims are within a sagebrush focal area, the agency’s label for the best of the best sage grouse habitat. However, because the Trump administration scrapped the proposed mineral withdrawal in 2017, “these lands have been open” to new mining claims, Hires said. BLM regulations say any company exploring for min- erals just needs to notify the agency of planned drilling ac- tivity at least 15 days before work begins. See, Grouse/Page A7 Baker County CHURCH DIRECTORY Elkhorn Baptist Church Sunday School 10 am Morning Worship 11 am Evening Worship 6 pm Discovery Kids Worship 6:30 pm 3520 Birch St, Baker City 541-523-4332 Baker & Haines United Methodist Churches Baker UMC, 1919 2nd St, at 11am Haines UMC, 814 Robert St, at 9am To join us on Zoom email bakerumc@thegeo.net and the link will be emailed to you or follow us on Facebook EARLY WORSHIP GATHERING WORSHIP GATHERING 8:30 AM 10:00 AM SECOND WORSHIP GATHERING Harvest Cafe Open 10:30 AM AM - 9:50 Harvest 9:00 Cafe open 30 minutes before AM each service 3720 Birch St, Baker City 541-523-4233 www.BakerCityHarvest.org CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Sunday Service 10:00 am www.ChristianScience.com 3rd & Washington, Baker City 541-523-5911 Pastor Michele Holloway Sunday Worship First Service 8:30 am 2nd Service & Sunday School 10:00 am Jr. High & High School Youth Tues 6:30 pm Youth Pastor Silas Moe 675 Hwy 7, Baker City • 541-523-5425 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Saturday Worship 11:00 am www.bakercitysda.com 17th & Pocahontas, Baker City 541-523-4913 St. Francis De Sales Cathedral Daily Masses: M, T, Th, F 9 am Day Chapel in Cathedral Wed Daily Mass 9 am at St. Alphonsus Chapel Sat 8 am at Day Chapel Baker City Saturday Mass 6 pm Baker City Sunday Mass 9:30 am St. Therese in Halfway 2 pm Sat St. Anthony's in North Powder 11:30 Sun 541-523-4521 Corner of First & Church, Baker City Established 1904 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday Worship Service 10:30 am 1995 4th Street, Baker City 541-523-5201 firstpresbaker.blogspot.com Sunday Worship 9:45am Sunday School 8:30am Coffee is 9:15 AM - 9:45 AM Pastor Troy Teeter 1250 Hughes Lane, Baker City (Corner of Cedar & Hughes) 541-523-3533 www.bakernaz.com AGAPE CHRISTIAN CENTER Sunday Services 10:00 am & 6:30 pm South Highway 7, Baker City 541-523-6586 SAINT ALPHONSUS HOSPITAL CHAPEL Service at 11 am Open to all patients, family and friends for reflection and prayer. 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