The Minnesota Court of Appeals has suspended more permits for PolyMet Mining's proposed $1 billion copper-nickel mine, pending a court hearing next month.
The temporary stays affect the company's permit to mine and two dam-safety permits, all issued last year by the state Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and opposed by environmental groups and the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa.
The move is another win for the environmental groups challenging what would be the state's first copper-nickel mine, although it remains to be seen how it affects progress on the divisive project. PolyMet has been moving toward construction.
The order, out Wednesday, also instructs the DNR to advise the court at an Oct. 23 hearing on two matters: whether PolyMet's new majority owner, Glencore, will be included on the permits; and what the DNR learned from its review of the failure of a mine waste dam that collapsed in Brazil earlier this year.
The DNR has not given the court enough information about either matter, Chief Judge Edward Cleary said in the order.
Opponents "raise serious, justifiable concerns about the ongoing regulation of the NorthMet project," he wrote, and said that post-permit developments require close review and the appropriate action "by the DNR and other permitting authorities."
The state Appeals Court has already suspended PolyMet's water quality permit pending a Ramsey County District Court hearing into alleged "irregularities" in how the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency handled that permit.
That hearing hasn't been scheduled yet. Two other investigations into the handling of the water permit are underway.