Support local news
MinnPost’s journalists are out in the community to report on the things that are happening in Minnesota. Your support right now will help fund their work AND keep our news paywall-free.
In Minnesota, water connects us all. It runs through small-town taps, wild rice beds, trout streams, and the quiet inlets of the Boundary Waters. It links the Iron Range to Duluth and Lake Superior, the St. Croix to the Mississippi, and everyone who calls this state home. Water sustains us — and right now, it needs our protection.
That’s why organizations across Minnesota have come together to speak with a shared voice about what’s at stake.
Minnesota’s clean water is under growing threat from multiple proposed sulfide ore mining projects that promise economic benefits but carry significant long-term risks. Transnational companies like Twin Metals/Antofagosta, NewRange/Glencore, Tamarack Mine/Talon Metals/Rio Tinto, and Green Bridge Metals are proposing mines in four of our state’s most important and sensitive watersheds — the Mississippi River, St. Croix River, Rainy River (Boundary Waters) and St. Louis River (Lake Superior).
Related: Minnesota water advocates lament Senate vote to remove mining moratorium on Boundary Waters watershed
These are the sources of drinking water, recreation, habitat, economic vitality and cultural lifeways for people across the state. Once contaminated, it may take centuries to heal, if at all.
Mine proponents say they can extract minerals safely. But science and experience tell a different story: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency identifies sulfide ore mining as one of the country’s most toxic industries. This type of mining has a long record of causing toxic pollution, including acid mine and heavy metal drainage that can poison fish, wildlife and communities for many generations. In state after state, the risks have proven real, and the consequences have often fallen on the people and waters downstream.
The stakes in Minnesota are simply too high to gamble with.
In honor of Earth Day, organizations and tribal nations across Minnesota stand together to affirm six shared principles we believe should guide every decision about our waters:
- Water cares for us. It is the foundation of life.
- Water is vulnerable. Once polluted by acid and toxic metals released from sulfide ore mining, surface water and groundwater may never recover.
- Water protects our health. What we pour into it, we pour into ourselves.
- Water is a shared responsibility. From towns to cities and Tribal Nations, we all have a duty to protect clean water.
- Water cannot be replaced. Fresh water is limited. As demand grows for minerals used in electric vehicles, data centers, artificial intelligence and defense infrastructure, pressure to mine in sensitive watersheds grows with it.
- Water connects us. Surface water and groundwater in Minnesota link us to our neighbors across communities, states, and generations.
Tribal nations within Minnesota have protected these waters for generations, and their stewardship reminds us that caring for water is a shared responsibility. When we protect clean water, we protect the health of our communities, the future of our children, and the places and resources that make Minnesota home.
We advocate for rigorous scientific review, respect for tribal sovereignty and public accountability in any decision that could put Minnesota’s clean water at risk. Clean water is Minnesota’s inheritance, not an expendable resource for short-term profit.
Related: Minnesota’s Boundary Waters is not a place to experiment with mining
Earth Day reminds us that protecting our inherited water means making the right decisions today to prevent long-term damage. We call upon our state leaders, regulators, communities and all Minnesotans to listen to what our water is telling us. We cannot be the generation that lets pollution flow downstream with regret in its wake.
We can choose a different path. One that honors our shared responsibility and shared future. We invite all who share these principles to join us in protecting Minnesota’s waters for generations to come.
This MinnPost Voices commentary was written by Kelly Applegate, commissioner of natural resources for the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe, who also represents Water Over Nickel, on behalf of the following organizations: Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy, Water Over Nickel, Friends of the Boundary Waters, Friends of the Cloquet Valley State Forest, Tamarack Water Alliance, Friends of the Mississippi River, Duluth for Clean Water, Clean Water Action Minnesota, CURE, Center for Biological Diversity , Save Lake Superior Association, Save Our Sky Blue Waters and Save the Boundary Waters.

