Uranium Mining: Environmental and Community Health Concerns

August 19, 2025 @ 10:00am (AKDT)

Uranium is in increasing demand due to its use as fuel for nuclear power plants and interest in carbon-free technologies as part of the energy transition.

In Alaska, the Native Village of Elim and nearby lands are being targeted as a potential source of uranium. Although the company that initiated the exploration program, Panther Minerals, has recently withdrawn from the project, it is possible that another mining corporation could proceed with further development.

The proposed area of exploration and development is home to critical fish and wildlife populations and supplies water for people living in Elim. When uranium is extracted from the ground as ore, it undergoes a process that utilizes toxic chemicals and blasting, resulting in significant quantities of mine tailings, radioactive waste, and polluted wastewater that will continue to contaminate for years to come. 

Drilling would disrupt the Tubutulik River with dangerous levels of uranium contamination, posing significant threats to the health of humans and wildlife. The community of Elim depends on salmon to sustain its cultural, traditional, and economic well-being and way of life. Jasmine Jemewouk, Alaska Community Action on Toxics’ Water Quality and Community Health Coordinator, is from Elim:

“We have the right to a clean environment and the right to give or withhold consent for any action that affects our lands, territories, and rights.” . 

Exposure to uranium contamination can lead to severe health problems, including cancer, genetic damage, and hormone disruption. Symptoms may not appear for decades, but the harm is irreversible. The Navajo Nation banned uranium mining on their lands in 2005 due to its many adverse effects on the environment and human health.

In this webinar, speakers will discuss the environmental and health impacts of uranium mining, the history of uranium mining on Diné lands, as well as efforts of communities to organize against it.

 

CHE-Alaska is part of CHE’s broader network, which is an international partnership of almost 5,000 individuals and organizations in 87 countries and all 50 US states that are committed to addressing environmental impacts on human health across the lifespan.

We encourage you to become a CHE partner so you can receive their monthly email newsletters, announcements about upcoming webinars, and other updates on a range of environmental health topics. Visit www.healthandenvironment.org to learn more.

 

Featured speakers

 

Jasmine Jemewouk is ACAT’s Water Quality and Community Health Protection Coordinator. She is a recent graduate of the University of Alaska Fairbanks with a bachelor’s degree in business administration and a minor in rural development. She is Inupiaq, Yupik, and Cherokee from the village of Elim, Alaska, located in the Bering Straits region. Jasmine works to oppose various mines around Alaska, including the Ambler Access Road Project, Graphite One, Panther Minerals AK Inc. Uranium exploration project, and others. Jasmine began working with ACAT in 2015 as an intern with the STEP-UP program, then later joined ACAT’s board in 2017. She represented her family and community perspective on the board until she resigned to join ACAT’s staff. Jasmine is very excited to work with ACAT and wants to help her community and future generations to protect themselves from harmful exposures and live a healthy lifestyle.

 

Emily Murray is an Inupiat elder and activist living in Elim, Alaska. As Vice President, she represents the Norton Bay Inter-Tribal Watershed Council (NBITWC) and has over 10 years of experience campaigning, writing, and advocating. Her topics of expertise include subsistence, land, and water resource protection. She is also a teacher at Aniguiin School in Elim, where she works with students to conduct research about the effects of uranium on community health. Emily presented on CHE-Alaska in 2008 and in 2023 on the topic of community health and proposed uranium mining in Alaska. 

 

Richelle Thomas is a Diné doctoral candidate at the University of Arizona’s Department of Environmental Science. The title of her dissertation research is “Examination of Root Border Cells in Medicinal Plants Exposed to Heavy Metals and their Antibiotic Resistance of the Rhizosphere.

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