EnergyMining

British Columbia’s Environmental Appeal Board upholds C$800,000 Peace River Coal penalty 

Trend Roman coal mine in Northeastern British Columbia. Image frm Conuma Resources.

British Columbia’s Environmental Appeal Board has upheld a ruling that handed Peace River Coal Inc. an C$800,000 ($580,000) fine after it repeatedly failed to comply with its environmental permit at its Trend Roman coal mine near Tumbler Ridge, Business in Vancouver reported. 

The Peace River coal mine was a metallurgical coal mine in northeastern BC, that was owned by Anglo American and suspended production in 2014 due to low coal prices. In February 2025, the idled mine was sold to Conuma Resources, a coal miner with operations in northeastern BC. 

The penalty was the largest ever issued by the B.C. Ministry of the Environment under the Environmental Management Act when it was first handed down in 2021. These infractions included failing to monitor mine waste discharge into fish-bearing waters and neglecting to limit airborne particulate emissions stemming from the Trend-Roman mine’s failure to limit the discharge of selenium into three nearby creeks and rivers, BIV reported. 

In the original 2022 decision to penalize the company, Peace River Coal’s mine was reportedly found to have breached selenium discharge limits by as much as 350% between 2016 and 2019.

“The company’s environmental permit was initially issued on October 31, 2015. It recognizes that effluent from the mine site is directed to a set of sedimentation ponds. One Permit required that Peace River construct and start operating a second water treatment facility on Gordon Creek, downstream of the sedimentation ponds, by March 31, 2017 to reduce selenium levels in Gordon Creek. In May 2016, Peace River applied for an amendment to the Permit, to delay the construction of the Second facility,” the ruling reads. 

According to the decision, the Director concluded that Peace River had violated the permit by not submitting quarterly reports (six times) and one annual report as required.

The Director also determined that there were 40 exceedances at a second monitoring station, downstream of the planned location of the Second Facility. The Director considered this to be a “major” contravention, with an associated base amount of C$20,000 per day. 

Four other coal mines in the province

Conuma Resources resumed mining at its Quintette coal mine in northeastern BC last year, 24 years after it was placed in care and maintenance. 

It now operates four mines in the province — Brule, Wolverine, Willow Creek, and Quintette — it acquired the latter in 2022 from Teck Resources for $120 million.

In June 2024, the company was fined for over 400 environmental protection violations at its Brule mine site, committed between 2020 and 2023. These infractions included failing to monitor mine waste discharge into fish-bearing waters and neglecting to limit airborne particulate emissions.

This post has been syndicated from a third-party source. View the original article here.

Related Articles

Back to top button