Potash Salt Tailings Threaten Colorado River Water Resources
In October 2010, I had an opportunity to view the Intrepid Potash Cane Creek Facility from the air. After a Redtail Aviation scenic flight over Canyonlands National Park, we turned back towards the Moab airport at Canyonlands Field. As we flew north along the Colorado River, our pilot banked the airplane around the place called Potash. Since the sky was hazy, my near-vertical shots turned out the best. If my earlier ground-level views had been disturbing, they did not prepare me for what I saw from the air. 
When viewed as a unit, an in-situ recovery (ISR) 
potash mine, the evaporation ponds and the processing and storage 
structures comprise the Cane Creek Facility. Sitting on what looks like 
the central bulge of the ancient Cane Creek Anticline, the facility 
encompasses hundreds of acres. At its highest elevation are the 
injection sites. While many in-situ mines require both injection and 
pumping, the salt structures beneath Potash appear to spontaneously 
eject brine at the surface. From there, wet potash salt tailings run 
freely to the evaporation ponds. Terraced across the bench land is a set
 of eighteen large ponds. A smaller set of six ponds extends almost to 
the edge of a precipice. Surrounding those ponds on both sides are side 
canyons that empty into the Colorado River. 
If
 the Intrepid Potash Cane Creek Facility represents the current state of
 the art in potash mining, what can we expect from the upcoming Passport Potash, Inc. mine in Arizona's Holbrook Basin?
 If the proposed Holbrook Basin ISR potash mine goes into operation, it 
would immediately become one of the top ten water users within the Little Colorado River Basin. Today, it is rare to  find wind-powered water wells anywhere in the Four Corners.
 Historical use of wind-driven pumps for cattle watering and cattle 
fodder was pumping enough to dry out most Four Corners aquifers. With 
regional water tables at historical lows,
 most water sources are now too deep to tap with wind power. No one 
knows exactly how much the Holbrook Basin aquifer may hold. One can only
 hope that it is enough.
find wind-powered water wells anywhere in the Four Corners.
 Historical use of wind-driven pumps for cattle watering and cattle 
fodder was pumping enough to dry out most Four Corners aquifers. With 
regional water tables at historical lows,
 most water sources are now too deep to tap with wind power. No one 
knows exactly how much the Holbrook Basin aquifer may hold. One can only
 hope that it is enough.
Most
 of the water used at the Cane Creek Facility soaks into the ground as 
brine-laden slurry or evaporates from the settling ponds. In this 
desert-style solution mining, there appears to be little recycling or 
reuse of produced water. If not for a steady supply of Colorado River 
water, the Cane Creek  Facility
 would not be sustainable. If the proposed Passport Potash Holbrook, 
Arizona Project utilizes solar energy to dry fine tailings, there will 
be little remaining surface water there to recycle. A gallon pumped from
 the Holbrook Basin aquifers could be a gallon gone forever.
Facility
 would not be sustainable. If the proposed Passport Potash Holbrook, 
Arizona Project utilizes solar energy to dry fine tailings, there will 
be little remaining surface water there to recycle. A gallon pumped from
 the Holbrook Basin aquifers could be a gallon gone forever. 
Before potash mining is approved at the Holbrook 
Basin play, the public deserves straightforward, honest and complete 
answers regarding the intentions of Passport Potash and its partners. 
Here are my questions:
- 
    Is Passport Potash proposing a conventional mine or an in-situ recovery (ISR) mine in the Holbrook Basin?
- 
    If it is to be a solution mine, what water sources do they plan to tap?
- 
    How much water will their one-to-two million tons per year (1-2 mtpy) mine require?
- 
    If produced brine is injected back into rock strata below, could it raise the salinity of the aquifer?
- 
    Is there sufficient seasonal inflow to the aquifer, or will the mine require a net annual withdrawal from the aquifer?
- 
    If there will be a water deficit, what environmental impact will there be on the Holbrook Basin and the Little Colorado River Basin at large?
- 
    Is the economic development created by ISR potash mines in the Holbrook Basin worth the risk of environmental degradation?
 Before
 full-scale ISR mining accelerates all over the Four Corners, we need an
 honest and independent appraisal of its environmental impact. Not 
bothering to conduct an environmental impact study, the Utah BLM Office 
recently downplayed the impact of potash mining in the Sevier Valley, Utah.
 In fact, they published a statement that mining there would have "no 
impact". With solution mining in the Four Corners, there is always an 
impact, not the least of which is a trade-off between mineral yield and 
water usage. Plans are currently underway by both Ringbolt Ventures
 and Mesa Exploration for ISR potash mines in the Lisbon Valley, Utah. 
Uranium Resources, Inc. has approval for an ISR uranium mine on the 
Navajo Reservation in Arizona. Although still contested in court, plans 
go forward for extraction of oil sands from the Uintah Basin, Utah.
 With so many plans underway to divert or pump water into mineral 
processing, we can no longer ignore the issue of regional water usage. 
There is not, after all, an unlimited supply.
Before
 full-scale ISR mining accelerates all over the Four Corners, we need an
 honest and independent appraisal of its environmental impact. Not 
bothering to conduct an environmental impact study, the Utah BLM Office 
recently downplayed the impact of potash mining in the Sevier Valley, Utah.
 In fact, they published a statement that mining there would have "no 
impact". With solution mining in the Four Corners, there is always an 
impact, not the least of which is a trade-off between mineral yield and 
water usage. Plans are currently underway by both Ringbolt Ventures
 and Mesa Exploration for ISR potash mines in the Lisbon Valley, Utah. 
Uranium Resources, Inc. has approval for an ISR uranium mine on the 
Navajo Reservation in Arizona. Although still contested in court, plans 
go forward for extraction of oil sands from the Uintah Basin, Utah.
 With so many plans underway to divert or pump water into mineral 
processing, we can no longer ignore the issue of regional water usage. 
There is not, after all, an unlimited supply. As a child, I would often share a milkshake with a 
friend. From the word, “Go”, we would each suck on our straw as fast as 
we could until the glass was empty. Shall we now stand by and watch as 
the quest for oil sands, uranium and potash production dries every 
aquifer in the Colorado River Basin? Continuing on our current heedless path guarantees a future with water shortages for all.
Author's Note: Article updated 9/2/2017.
Read Chapter One – The Little Colorado River Basin
Read Chapter Two – Holbrook, Arizona Basin - Potash
Read Chapter Three - Holbrook Basin Water CrisisBy James McGillis at 01:16 PM | Colorado River | Comments (1) | Link

 
