Here and Now
The Bend Deposit and Mining Prospects for Northern Wisconsin
Clip: Season 2400 Episode 2434 | 10m 12sVideo has Closed Captions
GreenLight Metals is conducting exploratory drilling to assess copper in the Bend Deposit.
GreenLight Metals is conducting exploratory drilling in Taylor County to assess whether the levels of copper and other minerals in the Bend Deposit would make mining profitable as global demand grows.
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Here and Now is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Here and Now
The Bend Deposit and Mining Prospects for Northern Wisconsin
Clip: Season 2400 Episode 2434 | 10m 12sVideo has Closed Captions
GreenLight Metals is conducting exploratory drilling in Taylor County to assess whether the levels of copper and other minerals in the Bend Deposit would make mining profitable as global demand grows.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship>> All right, Senator Johnson, thank you very much.
>> Have a good day.
>> Right now in northern Wisconsin, crews are working around the clock to drill deep into the bedrock.
It's called exploratory drilling.
And the goal is to determine if a deposit of copper, gold and other minerals in the rock is rich enough to bring metallic sulfide mining back to the state.
Here and now, senior political reporter Zac Schultz has the story.
>> What we have going on here is the drilling process has just started.
>> It's a Sunday morning in the Chequamegon-nicolet National Forest in Taylor County.
A drill team out of Minnesota is making the final site preparations, digging a sump pit that will hold cuttings from the drilling that is about to begin.
Steve Donahue is on the board of directors for Greenlight Metals, the company behind the exploratory drilling.
>> And so the drill crew is getting ready to start coring the bedrock.
Okay.
And that's a hollow barrel with a diamond impregnated tip on it.
And it just cuts out a cylinder of the rock going down.
>> The drill team will cut ten feet of bedrock.
Use this tip, called a water swivel, to pull up the core and repeat.
>> This particular hole will go down about 1500 feet.
>> Greenlight Field geologists will then box up the cores and bring them back to their facility.
>> They log the geology, process the core, cut it up into segments, send it off to a lab where the lab tests it for things like copper and gold and tellurium.
>> Greenlight metals conducted exploratory drilling at the site last summer.
>> What we're seeing is about 2 to 3% copper in the ore, or what we would call.
Or if you look at the average deposit that's being mined in the world, it's maybe half a percent.
>> The site is known as the bend deposit, and it was first identified and explored in the 1980s.
>> So each of these is a drill hole.
>> Eric Quigley is Greenlight Metals director of exploration.
A computer model shows every exploratory hole drilled at the site in the last 40 years.
>> That red represents the copper, you know, primarily the copper and gold mineralization that we've identified.
>> The current drilling is trying to expand the picture to see if the deposit runs deeper than previously known.
The cores from last summer were promising.
They used a red marker to circle flecks of gold in the bedrock.
>> The visible gold within, I think, is about roughly two meters, probably averaging about a third a third of an ounce per ton, which is extremely, extremely high grade material.
>> They have conservative projections of what's in the bend deposit.
>> 4 million tons of ore, copper grade ore that was about 1 to 2% copper with good grades of gold.
And now we're finding tellurium in there.
What we're hoping to do is to expand the tonnage of that by drilling other areas around this deposit.
>> The results were enough for Greenlight Metals to secure another $11 million in funding from investors to continue the exploratory drilling.
But that doesn't mean a mine is coming to Taylor County in the immediate future.
>> So we're years away from ever from being at the point where we would actually start the permitting process with the DNR and the federal government on an actual mine out there.
>> Previous mining proposals in Wisconsin have received hostile reactions.
So Greenlight Metals is being proactive in community outreach, presenting updates to groups like the Westboro Town Board.
>> We want to be coming in and talking to you and other local units of government, because I think your input is going to be important and we want to factor that in.
The public, I would say, is about 70% enthusiastic about the potential.
And then there's another group of people who obviously have concerns about what it means for the environment.
>> I know you guys take water from the yellow River to the drilling.
What kind?
What is there in the permit that maintains a minimum flow in the yellow River?
>> The concerns are primarily focused on environmental impact.
The bend deposit is under national forest land in just a few hundred yards from the yellow River.
>> We just keep each other informed, informed about the issues.
Protecting the environment.
>> Scott Stalheim and Cathy Mauer are part of a group called friends of the yellow River.
>> I think there should not be mining in this area for a lot of those reasons.
That's my personal opinion, and I think many of the friends of the yellow River would feel that way.
>> The group is small and private, mainly focused on educating members.
An open question is whether they should become more public and vocal.
>> We had quite a few people with different opinions.
because it's just exploratory mining that, well, it doesn't matter much.
And until a real mine comes, then we'll start to worry about it.
>> I think it's a fundamentally incompatible land use to have on our national forest.
>> One group that is publicly opposing the drilling is the Wisconsin chapter of the Sierra Club.
Dave Blouin is the state mining committee chair.
>> The environment here is especially water rich, and that makes it really almost incompatible with modern mining, especially metallic sulfide mining.
>> The issue is the copper and gold are found within bedrock heavy with sulfides.
As you can see in the cores from the bend deposit.
>> There's a very stark contrast between the unmineralized rock and the heavy sulfide content.
>> After the ore is mined, it has to be processed.
Sulfides in the rock produce acid when exposed to air and water.
>> Imagine a finely ground up, almost powdery waste material that's that's left over from the processing to skim off the metals in the first place.
And you have this acid producing material that is chock full of nasty toxics that if they get into groundwater or surface waters or wetlands, are absolutely polluting and damaging to the environment.
So this includes lead, mercury, arsenic.
>> Most of the environmental damage from metallic sulfide mining comes from leaks at the tailings facilities polluting the groundwater.
>> That's an area that has gone through tremendous changes in terms of how the tailings facilities are managed.
>> This video shows the processing plant and tailings facility for the Eagle Mine, a metallic sulfide copper mine in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
Donohue says they don't have designs yet, but a processing facility in Wisconsin would have an engineered liner and a drainage system and would be capped at the end of its lifespan.
>> So it's very analogous to what you would see for a municipal waste landfill.
>> He also says the ore wouldn't be processed in the national forest.
Bend is one of four deposits across northern Wisconsin they would hope to mine, and the processing and tailings facility would be at one centralized location.
>> And that allows us to then capitalize, create economies of scale where we can have a pipeline of projects that over a generation or multiple generations are feeding into that operation.
>> Blouin says green light is the fourth company to explore bend, and each previous effort has shown it wasn't economically viable.
>> The overall deposit at bend is under 2% copper, meaning 98% of the material that comes out is waste.
>> Donohue says a lot has changed since the last exploration at bend.
For one, the demand for copper is up, raising the price for copper.
>> So there's a lot more demand in the system because of things like AI, electric vehicles building out the electric grid.
It's going to take a lot of copper.
>> They've also discovered a rare earth element called tellurium, labeled by the U.S.
as critical to the creation of solar panels.
>> In the drill program that was completed this past summer.
The assay data indicated about 340 350g of tellurium per ton in the material.
>> The old argument for mining in Wisconsin focused on the miner on the flag, or the need for jobs.
But the new argument is national security.
>> We're very reliant on foreign sources for many, many critical metals.
If we don't want to be dependent on adversaries for these critical metals, we're going to have to do it here domestically.
national security argument simply because bend isn't big enough to factor in.
>> In terms of the amount of minerals that ore metals that a bend deposit can produce, it's not going to dent or make any real difference in terms of national security for the United States.
>> Blouin understands any mining permit is years away, but even the exploratory drilling comes with concerns.
>> It's concerning to us because you know that potential, and they've described it as a potential mining district across northern Wisconsin is deeply concerning.
Every potential proposal results in risk to the environment, to air, to water, to habitat in multiple locations forever.
>> Donohue reiterates there's a lot more drilling and a lot of studies to go, but at some point in the future, the economics will make the bend deposit viable.
>> If you look at these types of belts across the world, this is one of the larger undeveloped belts of its type in the world.
So from that perspective, I think very confident that there will be mining again in Wisconsin.
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