Statement for Anglo American Shareholder Meeting
My name is Verner Wilson III, I am Yupik Eskimo and Finnish, and I am here on behalf of Nunamta Aulukestai – an association of eight Alaska native village corporations in Bristol Bay Alaska. A delegation of Bristol Bay community leaders, who were scheduled to attend this meeting, were unable to be here due to the volcano.
Like most people in Bristol Bay, I am a commercial, sports and subsistence fisherman, and my families and ancestors have depended on the great salmon fisheries of Bristol Bay for thousands of years to put food on the table and for commercial income. I am here in response to Anglo American’s proposal to develop a copper and gold mine – the Pebble Mine - at the headwaters of Bristol Bay.
We have the world’s last great wild salmon fishery. It produces roughly 50% of the world’s commercial supply of wild sockeye salmon, generates approximately $400 million in revenue a year, and provides the vast majority of jobs in the region. The UK is the largest importer of Bristol Bay tinned salmon.
We know what it takes to protect a sustainable salmon fishery. And, we know that large-scale industrialization is simply incompatible with maintaining healthy wild salmon habitat. This is not about whether development of the mine can be done right. The headwaters of the world’s most valuable sockeye salmon fishery is simply the wrong place for large scale metal mining. For this reason, the Pebble mine is overwhelmingly opposed by the people of the region.
I have a stack of supporting documents here that demonstrate that eighty percent of Bristol Bay residents are opposed to this project. The threat to Bristol Bay has also generated a firestorm of support from the rest of the U.S., and I am here to deliver 100,000 signatures of opposition from across the nation.
Last year a delegation of Alaskans met with CEO Cynthia Carroll, and she made a commitment that Anglo American would not develop the proposed mine if the local communities do not support it. They do not. My question to you today is whether you intend to honor that commitment and withdraw from this project? Will you recognize and honor the results of an independent survey of Bristol Bay residents for that purpose?
Posts Tagged ‘alaska’
Verner Wilson Tells Anglo American: Honor Your Commitment; Drop Pebble
Thursday, April 22nd, 2010Crashing the Party? Late night post…
Thursday, April 22nd, 2010Our very own “deep throat,” just alerted us that there will be a pro-Pebble press conference tomorrow in Anchorage immediately following the press conference scheduled by the Alaska Native, business and political leaders who had planned to go to Anglo American’s shareholder’s meeting in London. Rumor has it that Pebble Limited Partnership is backing the press conference and some of the local spokespeople are on PLP’s payroll. (PLP being Anglo American plc. and Northern Dynasty Minerals partnership.)
Don’t Gamble with Our Salmon
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010Anglo American, the multi-national mining company funding exploration and development of the Pebble Prospect just north west of Lake Iliamna, and upstream from my home in Bristol Bay, is holding their shareholder meeting in London, on April 22, 2010. Absent from this meeting are the true shareholders of this project, the residents of Bristol Bay, save one representative, Verner Wilson.
So why aren’t more of us at that meeting, why wouldn’t we want a say in the investment of a development project at the top of our watershed? Trust me, a larger group tried. Shares in Anglo American were bought a year in advance, plane tickets and hotel arrangements made months ago. Many meetings were arranged, most importantly with Cynthia Carol, the CEO of Anglo American, to ask her to live up to her promise and halt efforts to develop Pebble Mine, because we, the People of Bristol Bay do not want this risk, left in our watershed forever.
Living where we do however, we are all too familiar with the unpredictable nature of volcanic eruptions interfering with commercial airline travel and we know that even the best laid plans can fail. In the past year, eruptions from one of our local volcanoes, Mount Redoubt, sent clouds of ash to heights of 65,000 feet disrupted commercial airline traffic to/from the Bristol Bay region and Anchorage International Airport for days.
Mount Augustine, another recently active volcano in Cook Inlet, sits less than 20 miles south of one of the critical aspects of Pebble Mine’s transportation infrastructure, a proposed deep-water port site. Earthquakes are yet another reminder of the unpredictable nature of our region. The 134-mile Lake Clark fault is the area’s largest active fault line, and appears to come within 10 miles of the proposed Pebble Mine site.
So the message Verner will still be delivering to Anglo American’s shareholders and CEO, is not one made in haste or ignorance. Our decision to oppose development of the Pebble prospect, is instead made out of educated experience. I am not opposed to a gamble – if you bet me a week ago that my friends wouldn’t stand up in that shareholder’s meeting and speak their piece in front of a delegation of Anglo American’s largest shareholders, I would have taken that bet in an instant. (who knew there was a volcano rumbling between us and them at the time)
However we do know the risks associated with developing a large scale sulfide ore body in a wet and seismically active area, at the top a watershed sustaining our homes, and the best remaining sockeye and king runs in the world. I don’t doubt that Anglo American and their partners would not attempt a project that they don’t think they could complete, after all it’s their money that’s being gambled– unfortunately it’s our lives, and with those stakes, we can’t afford to let Anglo American, or anyone, roll the dice.
Katherine Carscallen
Volcano Can’t Stop Alaskans: Press Conference Tomorrow
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010
For Immediate Release:
April 21, 2010
ADVISORY: Alaskans to demand Anglo American Plc. shelve Pebble Mine
project and uphold promise made by company’s CEO
Alaskans, whose plans to travel to London were scuttled by the
Icelandic volcano, will hold a press conference and teleconference on
Thursday, April 22. One Alaskan, already in United Kingdom, will
attend company’s annual meeting in London to carry their opposition
message to executives and shareholders
ANCHORAGE, Alaska– Alaskan community and political leaders opposed
to the proposed Pebble Mine will ask Anglo American Plc. on Thursday
to uphold promises its CEO has made to local communities and withdraw
its plans to mine in the headwaters of Bristol Bay, spawning grounds
for the most valuable wild sockeye salmon runs in the world.
They will detail their opposition message on Earth Day during a press
conference, open to reporters and media representatives across the
world through an open teleconference, on Thursday, April 22. The
conferences will begin at 11 a.m. (Alaska Time). See additional
details below.
The Alaskans had intended to travel to London this week to confront
Anglo American executives at the company’s annual meeting on
Thursday. However, they had to scuttle their plans because of travel
restrictions put in place in the wake of ash released from
Eyjafjallajokull, an Icelandic volcano.
Instead, Verner Wilson, an Alaska Native and commercial fisherman who
was in Paris before the volcano erupted, will participate in the
Anglo American’s general meeting on their behalf.
Wilson will carry letters from Alaska Native leaders and supporters,
asking the company to rethink its plans to mine in Bristol Bay.
TELECONFERENCE, PRESS CONFERENCE DETAILS
WHEN:Thursday, April 22 at 11 a.m. Alaska Time; 3 p.m. Eastern Time
and 8 p.m. London Time.
LOCATION FOR PRESS CONFERENCE: Valdez Room at the Anchorage Marriott
Downtown, 820 W. Seventh Ave., Anchorage, Alaska.
CALL-IN FOR TELECONFERENCE: 1-800-247-5110 (USA), 1-334-323-7224
International Number, Note: Costs will apply)
PASSCODE FOR TELECONFERENCE:86533
WHO:
• Verner Wilson, outreach coordinator for Nunamta Aulukestai, who
will be speaking live after having participated in Anglo American
annual meeting in London earlier in the day.
• Rick Halford, former Alaska Senate president and majority leader.
• Everett Thompson, a commercial fisherman and co-owner of Naknek
Family Fisheries.
• Bobby Andrew, spokesman for Nunamta Aulekstai.
• George Wilson, a director of the Levelock Village Council.
• Lydia Olympic, a native of the village of Igiugig and community
leader.
For more information go to:
http://cts.vresp.com/c/?ResourceMedia/81dcd32f3b/TEST/d537b46415
####
Media Contacts:
• Harlin Savage, Resource Media,(720) 564-0500 Ext. 11, (Skype) 020
8133 87694, harlin@resource-media.org
• Lynda Giguere, Resource Media (907) 771-4020,
lynda@resource-media.org
Follow Our Bristol Bay on Twitter and Facebook at:
Twitter -
http://cts.vresp.com/c/?ResourceMedia/81dcd32f3b/TEST/866a595809
Facebook -
http://cts.vresp.com/c/?ResourceMedia/81dcd32f3b/TEST/f162b73c28/#%21/pages/Our-Bristol-Bay/311521862825?ref=ts
Verner versus Goliath
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010For all of us who had hoped that the Bristol Bay delegation would make it over to London on Earth Day to visit with the shareholders of Anglo-American and communicate that the stakeholders of Bristol Bay do not want their proposed Pebble Mine project, we have realized and accepted the fact that the Icelandic volcanic ash has prevented that from happening. We do, however, have one member of the delegation who will be carrying our message-Verner Wilson.
In taking the time to digest the frustration of more representatives not being able to make the journey, I have found an ironic and poetic message that I would like to think people against the Pebble observe, but that the Anglo shareholders and developers need to better learn; nobody has dominion over nature. We as people can fret over, build, manipulate, move, but never control what the earth will do.
I have heard Verner being compared to the David to Goliath and also the anti-Pebble contingency being the David to Anglo-American’s Goliath. Robin Samuelson, the son of Harvey Samuelson, was presented with this comparison and he simply replied with, “Yeah, and David won!”
Verner, you are our David and I trust that you will deal some swift blows. The effects may not be felt immediately, but every effort is significant. Just remember, the people you are facing are only people. Their power pales in comparison to what the Earth is capable of.
Melanie Brown
Bristol Bay Set Netter
Trout Unlimited Outreach Contractor
“Mudflats” blogs on mining companies’ promises
Monday, April 12th, 2010From Mudlfats:
“We in Alaska hear all kinds of messages about how the mine can be done safely, and that the corporations involved know what they’re doing, and they really promise that everything will be just fine. It’s those damn greenies and environmentalists who just want to lock away all our resources.
“Why, these companies would never dream of proceeding unless they were really pretty sure that nothing bad would happen to the fishery. Yes, they know that Bristol Bay seafood is responsible for half of the nations intake. Yes, they know that local Native people have relied on these salmon for millenia. Yes, they know about the commercial fishermen that rely on this fishery. That’s why they’re going to be really careful. Really, really careful.”
Splitting Table Holds Memories; Cultural Knowledge
Monday, April 12th, 2010An excerpt from an op-ed by Lydia Olympic that appeared in the Bristol Bay Times:
Our fish splitting table embodies what it means to be an Alaska Native family, rich in tradition and steeped in culture.
During the long, dark winters my thoughts wander back to summer. Some of my most cherished memories stem from what happens around my family’s fish splitting table on the shores of Iliamna Lake in the remote village of Igiugig. Mom made the table top out of old plywood and used scrap wood for the legs; it’s nothing fancy, but so important. These tables are found at every fish camp around Bristol Bay. Our fish splitting table knows our intense sorrows from the tears we have shed on it. Our table knows of our immense joys and has shook with our laughter. It knows of our dreams, and most of all it has listened to our voices as our culture is passed down from generation to generation. Our table is multi-generational: grandmas, mothers, daughters, sisters, cousins, nieces and grandkids use it every summer.
We spend hours at the table splitting our salmon. Both young and old hold the ulu as we cut hundreds of wild salmon that feed us during the long, cold winter months. Everyone has a job and everyone contributes, even the tiniest ones. Aiden, my 4-year-old great-nephew, is charged with washing our fish and taking care of his younger brother, younger cousin and, this summer, a younger sister.
If you listen quietly you can hear our table moan the loss of a loved one who no longer has her turn at the splitting table. In Yupik, “Alla” means older sister. Tragically, we lost my Alla, Anecia, last March. The first day at the table, as we worked on our sockeye salmon, we were all so quiet because one of our own was missing.
To read Lydia’s full op-ed, go to, The Bristol Bay Times here.
Watch Out Anglo American: Alaskans Are Headed To London
Friday, April 9th, 2010A year ago, a delegation of eight Alaskans from Bristol Bay traveled to London to confront Anglo American executives in person at the mining giant are annual shareholders meeting. In a room packed with investors, all eyes turned to the Alaskans as they stood to urge the company to respect the will of local people, who by a vast majority don’t want Pebble Mine in their backyard.
The Alaskans left with a promise from Anglo American Plc. CEO Cynthia Carroll who told them the multinational company wouldn’t go forward with the project if local residents opposed it. Although the meeting was private, Carroll had already made a public statement to that effect during an interview with the Harvard Business School Alumni Bulletin in 2009, http://www.alumni.hbs.edu/bulletin/2009/june/oneonone.html
Next week, five Alaskans will return to London even more resolved to stop the mine and spread the word internationally about the threat it poses to Bristol Bay wild salmon and the people whose lives and livelihoods depend on them. They will attend Anglo American Plc.’s general meeting on April 22, which is Earth Day, to again tell the multinational and its CEO to make good on the promises they make.
The group traveling to London includes local Native community leaders, Bobby Andrew, George Wilson, and Lydia Olympic. Also attending the general meeting are Everett Thompson, a commercial fisherman, and former Alaska Senate Majority Leader Rick Halford.
Follow us online at this blog, Twitter and Facebook as those Alaskans travel across the Atlantic to stand up for thousands of Alaskans whose lives could be ruined if the Pebble mine project goes forward.
Poll Finds Bristol Bay Residents Oppose Pebble Mine
Monday, October 26th, 2009A recent poll conducted by Craciun Research demonstrates the overwhelming opposition to the Pebble Mine project in the Bristol Bay region. They favor subsistence over mining. Alaska Natives, fishermen and business owners agree the mine would threaten the Bristol Bay fishery on which so many livelihoods depend.
Below is the Sept. 22 press release announcing the poll results:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Contacts: Bobby Andrew, Nunamta Aulukestai, (907) 842-5983
Lydia Olympic, member of local Alaska Delegation to the U.K., (907) 301-1873
Jean Craciun, president and CEO, Craciun Research, (907) 279-3982
Poll Finds Bristol Bay Residents Favor Subsistence Over Pebble Mine
Groundbreaking research finds 79 percent believe mine would damage salmon fishery;
Native leaders and fishermen ask Anglo American CEO to honor promise
Anchorage, Alaska – A new poll released today finds an overwhelming majority of Bristol Bay residents strongly prefer their subsistence lifestyle to the promise of jobs at the proposed Pebble Mine.
The poll, which is the most in-depth survey of local Alaska Natives’ opinion on the Pebble Mine, found that 79 percent of respondents believe the mine, located in the headwaters of two of the region’s largest salmon-spawning rivers, would damage Bristol Bay’s wild salmon fishery – a key resource that many residents depend on for income
and food.
“What Anglo American’s CEO told us when we met in London earlier this year was that if local communities did not want Pebble mine, then Anglo American would not build it,” said Bobby Andrew, spokesperson for Nunamta Aulukestai, a coalition of eight village corporations that commissioned the survey. “A majority of local people know the mine will pollute and destroy subsistence, commercial and sport fishing and adamantly oppose it.
“We are asking Anglo American to honor its promise and withdraw from the Pebble project,” Andrew said.
Andrew and the three other local Alaskans who met with Anglo American executives and shareholders earlier this year in London sent a letter today to the company’s CEO, Cynthia Carroll, along with the survey results. They asked her to adhere to promises she made in a private meeting that the company would abandon the Pebble project if local
communities rejected it.
The letter dated September 22, 2009, stated: “Opposition to the mine is overwhelming and unwavering despite significant outreach efforts by Anglo American and Northern Dynasty over the years…. With that in mind, we ask you to keep your stated commitment to forego development of the Pebble mine given the ongoing community opposition.”
“We are not going to risk our subsistence way of life, which has sustained our families for generations, on the Pebble Mine,” said Lydia Olympic, an Igiugig native who joined the group that met with top company officials in London in April. “Mining is not the answer.
“Sustainable development can only be based on our wild salmon, clean water, and renewable energy – not on a mine that will pollute our land and water with toxic waste,” Olympic said.
The poll released today was conducted by Anchorage-based Craciun Research, which sampled 411 Bristol Bay residents from six parts of the Bristol Bay region between May 18, 2009 and June 2, 2009. It was statistically drawn to get an accurate assessment of opinion in each of those areas: Alaska Peninsula, Lake Iliamna/Lake Clark, Nushagak Bay, Nushagak River, Togiak, and Kwichak Bay. The margin of error was plus or minus 4.8 percent.
Among the survey’s main findings:
• The vast majority of residents favored renewable energy development (94 percent), value-added fish packing (89 percent), and tourism that Alaska Native communities could be involved (82 percent) in over mining.
• Survey respondents agreed almost unanimously (97 percent) that maintaining subsistence-lifestyle resources and their subsistence lifestyle is important.
• Seventy-two percent of those surveyed reported that a significant part of their diet
came from fish, game, berries and other subsistence sources.
• Only 8 percent of survey respondents supported the Pebble mine project, less than the one-third the number that support oil and gas drilling.
• The strongest opposition to the mine was in the Nushagak Bay area, but even in Iliamna-Lake Clark area, where local businesses benefit more from current exploration activities, 73 percent of survey respondents oppose the mine.
• A majority (78 percent) thought Pebble mine would damage commercial, guided or subsistence fishing.
• A majority of respondents agreed that most jobs created by the mine would go to outsiders, not locals.
• Few respondents thought that mining could be done without harming the environment.
To download a copy of the survey report and the letter to Anglo American CEO Cynthia Carroll, go to: http://nunamtasurvey.info
Red Gold plays in Jackson Hole
Thursday, April 30th, 2009The wonderful documentary on Bristol Bay, the people and the fish, “Red Gold,” plays in Jackson Hole, WY. Check out the details here. Everyone who sees the film goes away with a deep understanding of what is going on in Bristol Bay, and the threat posed to the way of life enjoyed by those lucky enough to call the area home.










Anglo's CEO promised not to build the Pebble mine against community opposition. Surveys show: communities are overwhelmingly opposed. Click here to tell Cynthia to honor her promise!












