Calgary Herald

Force Alberta to monitor oilpatch: letter

Ottawa should lean on province to ensure environmen­tal fears handled, groups say

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON A dozen conservati­on and Indigenous groups have written federal Environmen­t Minister Jonathan Wilkinson asking him to force the Alberta government to reinstate environmen­tal monitoring in the province’s oilpatch.

“We feel the federal government does have something at risk here,” said Gillian Chow-fraser of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, one of the groups that signed the letter sent Tuesday.

The province’s energy regulator decided earlier this spring that companies no longer have to live up to a wide array of environmen­tal monitoring requiremen­ts that are a condition of their licences.

The suspension­s include air, water, land and wildlife measures. Most have no end date.

The regulator says the decision was made to protect workers and communitie­s during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Chow-fraser said the suspension­s will affect Wood Buffalo National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site downstream from Alberta’s oilsands. Federal assessment­s have already acknowledg­ed the park is under threat and UNESCO has warned the park’s status could be endangered if environmen­tal problems aren’t addressed in a federal action plan.

“That action plan references all these provincial regulation­s and regulatory bodies that the plan said should protect the park,” Chow-fraser said.

“Those are the exact regulation­s that have been unilateral­ly suspended.”

The signatorie­s want Wilkinson to urge Alberta to end the suspension­s and find out how they may have affected ongoing work at Wood Buffalo. They also want him to withhold any pandemic-related aid to the province’s energy industry until the suspension­s end.

The groups include the Fort Chipewyan Metis Associatio­n, the Northwest Territory Metis Nation and the Smith’s Landing First Nation. Environmen­tal groups include the Alberta Wilderness Associatio­n. The mayor of Fort Resolution, N.W.T., has also signed.

Other area First Nations are in favour of the letter.

“We do support it,” said Melody Lepine of the Mikisew Cree.

Wilkinson’s office wasn’t immediatel­y available for comment.

In an email sent Tuesday, the Alberta Energy Regulator said the suspension­s could come off as early as Aug. 15 if two ministeria­l orders from the province’s energy and environmen­t department­s are left to expire.

It said that figures supplied by industry suggest that between 95 and 98 per cent of environmen­tal regulation­s remain in place.

It also said Alberta’s chief scientist, Fred Wrona, believes the suspension­s won’t harm the longterm quality of the province’s monitoring data.

Chow-fraser said waiting for the United Conservati­ve government to decide when monitoring will resume isn’t good enough.

“That’s nice to hear, but we still don’t have any certainty on that.

“They are very vague suspension­s. There are no deadlines. We don’t have any certainty that it won’t be several months, half a year, a year.”

Earlier this week, three different northern Alberta First Nations filed a request to appeal the regulator’s decision to suspend monitoring.

Their request points out First Nations weren’t consulted, despite the decision’s impacts on their treaty rights.

It also says the suspension­s were made without any rationale linking specific activities to COVID -19 risks and despite work continuing at energy facilities. It adds the hold on monitoring came weeks after the province declared a state of emergency over the pandemic and just as Alberta was starting to ease its lockdown. The Canadian Press

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