Aura Nyheter Article Translation6 Mar 2019 20:39
Translated auras tweeted article, with google translate. Obviously its not perfect may have mistyped the odd letter. Brackets are just my thoughts as to the parts somewhat unclear once translated.
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Headline: we should only employ local labor
We will only employ Swedish and preferably local labor. You can write that already in the headline.
The loft (above) comes from Peter Reeve, CEO of aura enery and chairman of the board of their subsidiaries, who want to extract vanadium in the Oviken. LT has met the Australian during his stay in the lanet. (place?)
It is Tuesday afternoon when Peter Reeve rides up (arrived) in central ostersund. Until then, he has spent Tuesday hitting (meeting lol !) politicians and officials in the affected municipalities and in the region.
He's received a lot of concern.
Concern is based on a lack of information and a lack of knowledge. It is our task to explain how we have thought it has (explain why we think so) , and why it is so wrong, he says.
The biggest concern is with the drinking water to do. There are several municipalities that take drinking water from Storsjon and there is plenty of an accident where the water is Storsjon (potential for threat to water supplies/storsjon). What do you answer these people?
Then I can point to two very strong arguments. Haggan is eight kilometers from Storsjon. Between each and every one of them (between each part of Haggan) was (is) a 60-meter-high mountain ridge said if it - which is very unlikely - would be a lacquer (leak), it would be enormous to get over the ridge. Such a scenario is basically impossible.
The next thing I would say is that we will have the best water hydrologists in the world, which will make an assessment of the mine before any activity begins. We will do the Haggan project to what you guys say a zero discharge zone.
The processing plant, where we work with chemicals, will have a concrete strip around the entire plant. It is the first protection. Then we have a second concrete strip that is a little higher, and a third protection that is either (even) higher - just over one meter - around the entire plant.
However, varnishes (accidents) have occurred on other stables (mines). We had an accident in Finland in an open pit mine (Talvivaara) for several years since water contaminated with heavy metals ran out. Why shouldn't that happen?
It was bad like a hand. I would say that it is a management question. The company was not fired (started) at a good place and had a poor economy when the accident was committed, and lacked resources to deal with the problem. But after that, the Finnish government has taken up and arranged, so now it is a mine that is doing swell.
AIMO