Judge halts lithium drilling; Hualapai Tribe wins extension

Judge extends lithium drilling halt near Hualapai Tribe's sacred site Ha’Kamwe’, citing likely irreparable harm; tribe's lawsuit continues.
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  • A federal judge extended a temporary pause on exploratory drilling for a lithium mining project near the Hualapai Tribe’s sacred site, Ha’Kamwe’, after finding that irreparable harm from drilling is likely.
  • Judge Diane Humetewa ruled that while lithium exploration is important for renewable energy, it does not outweigh the potential damage to the tribe’s sacred sites and the agency’s obligations under federal regulations.
  • The Hualapai Tribe has actively voiced concerns about the Big Sandy Valley Lithium Exploration Project, which involves drilling across Bureau of Land Management land surrounding Ha’Kamwe’, but the agency initially deemed disruptions as temporary.
  • The court issued a preliminary injunction halting all drilling activity as the tribe’s lawsuit—claiming violations of the National Environmental Policy Act and the National Historic Preservation Act—continues.
  • The tribe feels validated by the decision and is determined to protect their sacred sites and way of life from the potential impacts of the mining project led by Big Sandy, Inc., a subsidiary of Australian company Arizona Lithium.

November 12, 2024 — The following article and the above image is republished from the November 7, 2024 issue of the Arizona MirrorOpens in a new tab. under the Creative Commons license.  Its author, Shondiin SilversmithOpens in a new tab., is an award-winning Indigenous journalist from the Navajo Nation who has covered Indigenous Affairs for over 14 years. She currently focuses on Arizona’s 22 federally recognized tribal nations. Her stories have appeared in local and national news publications across the country. Silversmith earned a master’s degree in journalism from Northeastern University in Boston and is pursuing a Ph.D. at Arizona State University. She is an active member of the Indigenous Journalists Association and is committed to amplifying Indigenous voices and storytelling through journalism. She has made it a point in her career to advocate, pitch, and produce stories about Indigenous communities in every newsroom she’s worked in.  Arizona Mirror is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

A federal judge extended a temporary pauseOpens in a new tab. of exploratory drilling as part of a lithium mining project near the Hualapai Tribe’s sacred site after the court found that irreparable harm from drilling is likely.

“Lithium exploration is an important public interest at a time when the United States is striving to transition to renewable sources of energy,” Judge Diane Humetewa wrote in the decision. “However, this interest does not outweigh the potential damage the Phase 3 drilling project may cause to Ha’Kamwe’, which is central to the Hualapai Tribe lifeway.

“Nor does it permit a federal agency to short-cut its regulatory consultation obligations or reasoned evaluation of the effects of its undertaking,” she added. “And this Court finds that irreparable harm from the Phase 3 drilling project is not just potential, it is likely.”

The Big Sandy Valley Lithium Exploration Project allows a subsidiary of an Australian mining company to drill and test more than 100 sites across U.S. Bureau of Land Management land surrounding one of the Hualapai Tribe’s cultural properties, among them Ha’Kamwe’, a medicinal spring sacred to the tribe.

For years, the Hualapai Tribe tried to work with the BLM by actively voicing their concerns about a lithium exploration project near Wikieup, in northern Arizona, but the agency ultimately ruled that any disruptions to the tribe would be temporary, and thus weren’t grounds to block the project.

“We’re pleased with how everything turned out with this decision,” said Ka-voka Jackson, the director of the Hualapai Department of Cultural Resources. “It was definitely worth the wait.”

Jackson said the judge’s decision is reassuring, and it validates the tribe’s long-voiced concerns.

“It feels like we’re being heard, and it also puts it into context that this is a very serious issue and the tribe is taking it very seriously,” she said. “We want to protect these sacred places and protect the water and other resources in the area, not only for us but for the future.”

The court issued a preliminary injunction on Nov. 5, halting all drilling activity as the Hualapai Tribe’s lawsuit continues in court. The decision comes over a month after the tribe presented its argument for the extension in courtOpens in a new tab..

“This doesn’t resolve the case,” Laura Berglan, a senior Attorney for Earthjustice representing the tribe, told the Arizona Mirror.

Berglan said they are pleased that the judge recognized that the drilling threatened the tribe’s resources after hearing from witnesses during the September hearing, and they will continue to work on the case as it moves forward.

“We’re glad the court rejected BLM’s 19th-century mindset, that the company gets whatever they want at the expense of Indigenous communities,” Berglan said in a press release. “BLM should have considered alternatives with less impact on Ha’Kamwe’, like drilling fewer wells or moving them farther from the spring.”

In August, the judge granted the Hualapai Tribe’s initial request for a temporary restraining order against BLMOpens in a new tab., temporarily freezing the exploratory drilling project.

The restraining order was granted after the Hualapai Tribe filed a lawsuitOpens in a new tab., following years of the tribe actively voicing its concerns about the mining effort.

“I feel a huge sense of relief today, but we know this is not the end of the story,” Hualapai Tribal Chairman Duane Clarke said in a written statement. “Our people have used Ha’Kamwe’ for centuries for healing, prayer, and rites of passage.

“We are absolutely determined to protect our sacred waters and our way of life from those who would destroy it to enrich themselves,” he added.

Jackson said they also feel fortunate because “this isn’t something that all tribes experience, having courts rule in their favor with issues like this, protecting sacred sites.”

“We feel very lucky, and we’re gonna keep charging forward,” she added.

Ha’Kamwe’ is located within the Hualapai Tribe’s property known as Cholla Canyon Ranch, and the boundaries of the Big Sandy Valley project nearly surround the entire property. Only one portion of the tribe’s land does not border the drilling project.

The spring is recognized as a traditional cultural property and is eligible to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The tribe’s lawsuit claims the project’s approval violates the National Environmental Protection Act and the National Historic Preservation Act.

The lawsuit asks for full compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which includes having the BLM take a “hard look” at the exploration activity’s environmental impacts and consider the implications of its actions on historic properties.

The lawsuit claims that BLM approved the mining project without appropriately considering a reasonable range of alternatives or taking a hard look at water resources under the NEPA and moved forward with the project without providing mitigation measures under the NHPA for Ha’Kamwe’ and other resources essential to the tribe, thus violating both acts.

Out of concern for Ha’Kamwe’, the tribe submitted multiple public comments, sent several letters of concern, and participated in tribal consultations with BLM throughout the Big Sandy Valley Lithium Exploration Project planning phase.

Big Sandy, Inc.Opens in a new tab., a subsidiary of Australian mining company Arizona LithiumOpens in a new tab., leads the project and has sought approval since 2019. Arizona Lithium is not a direct party in the Hualapai Tribe’s lawsuit, but it filed a motion to interveneOpens in a new tab.. Humetewa granted the request in August, allowing the company to defend against the tribe’s efforts to stop the project.

BLM’s approval of the Big Sandy Valley Project allows the mining company to drill and test up to 131 exploration holes across 21 acres of BLM-managed public land to determine whether a full-scale lithium mining operation could be viable.

~~~

Image via the Arizona MirrorOpens in a new tab.:

Exploratory wells have damaged the water flow at Ha’ Kamwe’ in Wikieup, Arizona, seen here on Saturday, March 5, 2022. Ha ‘Kamwe is a hot spring sacred to the Hualapai Tribe, which says an Australian company’s proposed lithium mining project threatens. Photo by Ash Ponders | Earthjustice

Deborah

Since 1995, Deborah has owned and operated LegalTech LLC with a focus on water rights. Before moving to Arizona in 1986, she worked as a quality control analyst for Honeywell and in commercial real estate, both in Texas. She learned about Arizona's water rights from the late and great attorney Michael Brophy of Ryley, Carlock & Applewhite. Her side interests are writing (and reading), Wordpress programming and much more.

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