Great Basin Resource Watch

Great Basin Resource Watch If Great Basin doesn't keep an eye on the mining companies, who will?

Working with communities in the Great Basin to protect their land, air, and water from the adverse effects of industrial development and resource extraction since 1994.

Please join us for a screening of this short film made in Nevada followed by a discussion of the issues, featuring speci...
11/13/2025

Please join us for a screening of this short film made in Nevada followed by a discussion of the issues, featuring special guests from the film. How can the clean transportation transition benefit blue-collar workers, public transit riders, and Indigenous people whose homelands are desired as mine sites for the raw materials for EV batteries? What changes are needed?

You can watch the film's trailer - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGUN-DDdqbY

Any questions, contact [email protected]

12/11/2021

‼️“Australian company begins drilling for lithium in southeast Oregon”‼️
Published: Dec 4, 2021, 12:55 pm

An Australian company has started drilling at a southeast Oregon site that could eventually host a large lithium mine.

Mineral exploration company Jindalee Resources Limited announced this week that it’s working to determine the extent of a lithium deposit in southern Malheur County.

The company said in a news release that the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries has approved drilling of 39 holes to shore up Jindalee’s estimate of how much lithium exists there.

A proposed lithium mine on the caldera in Nevada has been controversial for its potential ecological harm, desecration of a historic massacre site, and possible disruptions to ranching.

https://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/2021/12/australian-company-begins-drilling-for-lithium-in-southeast-oregon.html

Great Basin Resource Watch is HiringOutreach and Program CoordinatorGreat Basin Resource Watch is looking to hire a Neva...
12/09/2021

Great Basin Resource Watch is Hiring
Outreach and Program Coordinator

Great Basin Resource Watch is looking to hire a Nevada-based Outreach and Program Coordinator to develop and coordinate the outreach program, oversee our community support activities particularly to engage with frontline communities directly affected by mining activities, coordinate our energy transition mining work, support fundraising, and provide additional organizational support consistent with GBRW’s mission and programs. This is a part to full time position (depending upon applicant) that could involve significant travel, and reports to the executive director.


For details and application process:

Job Announcement Outreach and Program Coordinator Great Basin Resource Watch November 2021 Great Basin Resource Watch is a non-profit organization based in Reno, Nevada that works with communities of the Great Basin to protect their land, air, and water from the adverse effects of mining and resourc...

12/09/2021

Great Basin Resource Watch is looking to hire a Nevada-based Outreach and Program Coordinator to develop and coordinate the outreach program, oversee our community support activities particularly to engage with frontline communities directly affected by mining activities, coordinate our energy transition mining work, support fundraising, and provide additional organizational support consistent with GBRW’s mission and programs. This is a part to full time position (depending upon applicant) that could involve significant travel, and reports to the executive director.



For details and application process: https://gbrw.org/gbrw-is-hiring/

Communities Expose Stark Reality of Lithium BoomOn World E-mobility and Zero Emissions Day, a global network of communit...
09/22/2021

Communities Expose Stark Reality of Lithium Boom

On World E-mobility and Zero Emissions Day, a global network of communities directly impacted by lithium extraction have warned against drastically expanding mining in the name of green energy. Doing so risks trampling the rights of marginalized peoples and destroying ecosystems that play a vital role in regulating the global climate.

Media Release: https://yestolifenotomining.org/latest-news/media-release-communities-expose-stark-realities-of-lithium-boom/

Press Conference: Realities from the frontlines of lithium extraction
10 am PDT. 22nd September 2021.

Free event. Registration necessary: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN__bYm370rQSeNiA0wYyFqtA

Communique:
English: https://yestolifenotomining.org/latest-news/ylnm-lithium-communique/
Spanish: https://yestolifenotomining.org/recent-news/ylnm-litio-comunicado-1/?lang=es

09/09/2021

PRESS RELEASE: International Lithium Group Stands in Solidarity
with Peehee mu'huh / Thacker Pass Communities

For Immediate Release
September 8, 2021

Contacts:
John Hadder, Great Basin Resource Watch, 775-348-1986, [email protected]
Mirko Nikolić, YLNM-Lithium Group / Postdoc Linköping University, [email protected]
Hannibal Rhoades, YLNM-Lithium Group / The Gaia Foundation, [email protected]

Today, an international working group of individuals from around the world who are directly facing the effects of lithium extraction or are a part of organizations working alongside these frontline communities, have released a statement in support of the directly affected communities of the proposed Thacker Pass lithium mine. They are demanding that all ground-breaking at the Thacker Pass mine site be halted and that the affected communities be treated with full right to withhold consent for the mine.

The international YLNM lithium group is composed of people from places in Chile, Serbia, Portugal, Nevada, California, Australia, Spain, and the UK who are facing the negative repercussions of existing lithium mining or who are fighting proposed lithium mines threatening to devastate their communities, cultural resources, and ecosystems. It is from this place of first hand experience of the harms associated with lithium mining that they internationally demand for ground-breaking operations to be halted at Thacker Pass and for the affected communities to be treated with complete right to withhold consent for the mine.

Ramón M. Balcázar is one of the members of the YLNM network, who works at the Plurinational Observatory of Salares Andinos in protecting Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia's salt flats from lithium extraction: "​​As we can see in Nevada, the expansion of lithium mining reproduces colonialism not only in Latin America but also in stolen lands in so-called developed countries. If this is the cost of having electric cars for the most polluting countries of the world, maybe we need to find other ways for clean and just mobitly, and those ways are probably beyond green capitalism."

Prior to and after the Record of Decision on the Thacker Pass mine by the Bureau of Land Management in January 2021, large numbers of individuals from the various affected communities--such as the People of Red Mountain, the Fort McDermitt Paiute and Shoshone Tribe, The Reno-Sparks Indian Colony, the Burns Paiute Tribe, and the agricultural communities within Orovada and Kings River Valley--have been loudly voicing opposition. Members from these multiple frontline communities that will be directly and significantly harmed by the Thacker Pass Lithium mine have been fighting to prevent its construction through various peaceful avenues.

One of these forces of community resistance is the Atsa koodakuh wyh Nuwu, or the People of Red Mountain, which is a group of Fort McDermitt tribal descendants who formed specifically to oppose the Thacker Pass mine and other lithium projects threatening their homelands. As Deland Hinkey from the group states, "Peehee Mu'huh is sacred land and we must protect sacred land. It is not too late for change. We all need to realize that we only have one Earth and she must be protected. Stop corporations like Lithium Nevada, who want to destroy Mother Earth for profit...Let's Protect Peehee Mu'huh."

Folks from the agricultural communities next to the mine have also been clear in voicing the harms the mine will cause them. As one of these community members, Jean Williams, in Orovada, NV states, "this mine at Thacker Pass is not being permitted for the well being of our farming community. The process they wish to use is questionable. The amount of sulfur to be brought in for processing has the potential for permanent harm to crops and cattle production. Our water may disappear with no guarantee from the mine to make it right."

Despite their and other community members' efforts, and the clear community un-consent for the mine, it was permitted by the Bureau of Land Management in a fast-tracked manner that neglected proper Tribal consultation and public process. The mine is currently on the brink of construction, with many members from affected communities actively still resisting it, as well as active litigation in opposition to the mine's permitting from a local rancher, conservation groups, two federally recognized Tribes, and the Atsa koodakuh wyh Nuwu. It is still undetermined precisely when the mining company, Lithium Nevada, will be breaking ground, but they have stated intent to do so in the near future.

The international working group's statement of solidarity and demand for the rights of the communities affected by the Thacker Pass mine was echoed by over a dozen other international organizations and individuals who also signed on to the demands in the statement. The sentiment of solidarity with those on Thacker Pass's frontlines is global beyond the YLNM network.

In a time where proponents of the mine largely center their arguments around domestic production of lithium and preventing "outsourcing" of the harms of mining it onto other nations, the statement coming directly from those affected by lithium mining in these other nations speaks volumes in pushing back this narrative. It states loud and clear that communities, no matter where they are located, should hold complete right to withhold consent for mines that directly affect them, their cultural resources, sacred sites, water, land, and air. The YLNM lithium network and the greater global voices' sweeping support and solidarity for those harmed by the Thacker Pass mine sends the message that a win for the community members fighting the Thacker Pass mine is a win for communities directly affected by lithium mining everywhere.

"Our planet is home to an astonishing multitude of plant, animal, human communities and living environments. Toxic and exploitative extractivist system keeps trying to separate us from our communities and Nature, and plunges us deeper into climate and socio-ecological chaos that it caused in the first place. A true and just transformation will be led by communities and imbued by our knowledge to meet the specific needs and realities of the places we inhabit and care for. Through this work in our respective places, we will be able to join paths towards regenerating the Earth community of justice and solidarity," Mirko Nikolić from the YLNM-Lithium Group

The solidarity statement itself and all those who have signed onto the letter can be found here:

Very powerful op-ed about Peehee Mu'huh (Thacker Pass) by Daranda with the People of Red Mountain. Thank you Daranda for...
09/01/2021

Very powerful op-ed about Peehee Mu'huh (Thacker Pass) by Daranda with the People of Red Mountain. Thank you Daranda for your words!

Peehee Mu’huh, also known as Thacker Pass, is a culturally significant place for the Paiute and Shoshone, yet it is being threatened by Lithium Nevada.

08/25/2021

Event Alert: Thacker Pass Intervenor Plaintiff Hearing

This Friday, August 27th, at 9am

AMENDED MINUTE ORDER IN CHAMBERS of the Honorable Chief Judge Miranda M. Du on 8/11/2021.

IT IS ORDERED that a hearing, to be heard by Zoom Video Conference, is set for 8/27/2021 at 9:00 AM in Reno Courtroom 5 before Chief Judge Miranda M. Du. The Court will hear oral argument on Intervenor Plaintiff Atsa Koodakuh Wyh Nuwu's Motion for Preliminary Injunction (ECF No. 45 .)

Persons granted remote access to proceedings are reminded of the general prohibition against photographing, recording, and rebroadcasting of court proceedings. Violation of these prohibitions may result in sanctions, including removal of court issued media credentials, restricted entry to future hearings, denial of entry to future hearings, or any other sanctions deemed necessary by the court.

The Public may access and listen to the Hearing as follows:
Public telephonic participants may call the AT&T conference line listed below no later than ten (10) minutes prior to the hearing. The phone number to call is (888) 251-2909. The access code is 3803398 and the security code 082721. All telephonic participants must identify themselves to the Courtroom Administrator when they enter the telephonic conference. They must mute their telephones and refrain from speaking during the hearing. No one may place one's phone on hold during the proceedings.

08/20/2021

See update below from Earthworks on the Escobal Mine:

"Activists Call for Protection of Xinka Leaders Participating in Escobal Mine Consultation

Violence and intimidation have long plagued Pan American Silver's Guatemala silver mine

Today six U.S. and Canadian human rights and environmental organizations filed a letter with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) supporting a request to extend precautionary measures for activists opposed to the Escobal mine in Guatemala. The mine has faced strong local opposition from the day it started operations in 2011, opposition that has met violent repression, threats and defamation campaigns. Tahoe Resources sold the Escobal mine to Pan American Silver in 2019, since which time the risks for activists have persisted and are intensifying.

The letter endorses the request submitted by Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights and the Guatemalan Human Rights Ombudsman's Office regarding the insecurity facing communities and activists that oppose the Escobal mine. It asks the IACHR to monitor the security situation of communities in resistance and Indigenous Xinka leaders who are participating in the consultation process; to extend precautionary measures for leaders Julio David González Arango, Juan Eduardo Donis, Pablo Adolfo Valenzuela Lima, Edwin Alexander Reynoso Bran, and Luis Fernando García Monroy; and to request request information from the Guatemalan government regarding risks to activists and measures being taken to ensure their safety.

Since 2011, Xinka and campesino communities have organized to peacefully oppose the mine in southeastern Guatemala. Nearly 100 people were criminally charged for their role in the opposition, all eventually acquitted for lack of evidence. Today the mine is closed, pending consultation with the Xinka people as ordered by the country's highest court in September 2018.

For two years, the Xinka people were excluded from participation in the consultation and denounced illegalities and discrimination in the process. In October 2020, the Xinka came to an agreement with the government regarding the participation of their elected representatives and the start of the pre-consultation phase. The security situation has deteriorated since then. Gunmen shot and seriously injured community leader, Julio González, in January. The Xinka Parliament's lawyer and other Xinka representatives participating in the consultation process regularly receive death threats. Recent nationwide protests over government corruption and the co-optation of the courts underscore the lack of institutional protections for Xinka defenders and absence of an independent backstop to address illegalities in the consultation process (the letter contains a detailed historical summary).

Although Pan American Silver is a larger and more diversified mining company than Tahoe Resources, the Escobal mine remains an important asset for the company. With 14 mining projects that have established mineral reserves, Escobal represents 40% of Pan American Silver's silver reserves, which it calls a "catalyst" for business growth.

Pan American Silver has expressed its intention to reopen the mine following the consultation process, revealing a clear lack of respect for Xinka people's self-determination and their right to free, prior and informed consent, enshrined in international law."

08/17/2021

We wanted to circulate/repost a communication from the Atacamenos Del Altiplano Indigenous Community regarding mining in the region.

"Salar del Hombre Mu**to, Antofagasta de la Sierra, Catamarca
COMMUNICATION FROM THE ATACAMEÑOS DEL ALTIPLANO INDIGENOUS COMMUNITY
August 13, 2021

The mining company Galaxy held an "informative meeting" at the School of the
Ciénaga Redonda, to announce the progress of the works in Los Patos River.
Its diffusion was practically nil. Soon the EcoConciencia Foundation
also plans a meeting at the same School. We denounce that this
Foundation maintains close ties with mining companies and works
in order to obtain the social license of the populations, so that they can continue
go ahead with extractive projects. We also denounce the company Galaxy,
as well as Livent and Posco, for advancing on our communal territories,
without having carried out the Free and Informed Prior Consultation that
establishes both national legislation and international treaties.
They intend to appropriate our territories and common goods, without measuring the
impacts that their projects will have on the lives of the inhabitants of the
Salar and the entire region. We are aware of the irreversible impacts
generated by lithium mining, based on the experience of many populations
affected. The pattern repeats itself: indiscriminate use of water, depletion of
underground watersheds, soil and water contamination, loss of flora
and fauna, impoverishment of regional economies, violation of
indigenous and environmental rights.
Finally, we denounce the National and Provincial State, and also the
Municipal Government, for allowing the violation of our rights and promoting the
advancement of mega-mining, endangering the continuity of life in the
region. A sample of this is the complicity of the Ministry of Education,
represented by Supervisor Carlos Miranda Vázquez and Director Fany
Salva, who lent the educational establishment of Ciénaga Redonda so Galaxy can
continue with its fraudulent meetings. They also receive the collaboration of Yésica Casimiro,
delegate of the Ciénaga Redonda.We know that in this fight for the defense of our territories
the future is at stake.
It's the mining companies or us.




"

08/17/2021

Tribes are challenged by outdated, ineffective laws and a misunderstanding of their religious practices on sacred lands.

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