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Non-Nunavut groups want federal review of Izok Corridor

Organizations in Nunavut and beyond are lining up to take part in the environmental review of the Izok Corridor Project, which would see two mines and a 350-kilometre all-weather road near Kugluktuk, Nunavut.

N.W.T. and national groups want say in environmental hearings for Izok Corridor Project

Organizations in Nunavut and beyond are lining up to take part in the environmental review of the Izok Corridor Project.

The international company MMG wants to build two mines southwest of Kugluktuk, Nunavut. All of the mining and construction will take place within the territory, but many groups outside Nunavut say they also need to have a say.

The proposed project would see two mines joined by a 350-kilometre all-weather road and a port in the Coronation Gulf, and would have a significant environmental impact.

MMG's exploration camp at its High Lake site in the Kitikmeot region of Nunavut. The company has submitted its project proposal for zinc and copper mines to the Nunavut Impact Review Board. (MMG)

"Izok Lake will need to be dewatered to be able to access the ore deposits," said Derrick Moggy, who is with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

Moggy said hes concerned about the road, which will include 70 bridges.

Others worry about the mines impact on the sensitive Bathurst caribou herd. The road will cut through what some consider to be the animals core calving grounds.

Many aboriginal groups rely on the Bathurst caribou, from the Dene in the Northwest Territories, to the Athabasca Denesuline in Saskatchewan.

"The potential ecological and socio-economic impacts on the herd need to be considered in a transboundary forum," said Kris Brekke, from the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society in Yellowknife.

About a dozen outside groups have written to the Nunavut Impact Review board to ask that the project be reviewed by a federal environmental assessment panel that would include aboriginal groups from outside the territory.