Calgary Herald

Setting the record straight on oilsands monitoring

Funding has not been cut and is on par with other years, Jason Nixon writes.

- Jason Nixon is the Alberta minister of the environmen­t.

Recent media articles have spread misinforma­tion about the Oil Sands Monitoring Program and I want to set the record straight about its funding and how we make decisions.

Environmen­tal monitoring programs help protect our air, water, land and wild species.

As a world energy producer, Alberta needs to balance our diverse energy sector with strict environmen­tal rules and oversight.

Alberta’s government doesn’t make unilateral decisions when it comes to oilsands monitoring. Decisions, including proposed budget and monitoring work plans, are made by a committee of six Indigenous community representa­tives, industry, and the provincial and federal government­s.

Since the program started, it’s been funded by industry. The $43.9 million allocated for 2020-21 reflects the expected costs of monitoring to assure public and environmen­tal health, long-term monitoring, and focused activities for air, water, wetlands, wildlife and vegetation monitoring.

It’s not correct to characteri­ze the funding as a cut as some have done. In fact, it’s on par with actual spending from previous years — ranging from $40 million in 2015-16 to $51 million in 2018-19.

The funding this year reflects what’s actually doable during a global pandemic while acknowledg­ing that about three months of fieldwork was lost due to health and safety reasons. Just like the Fort Mcmurray-area wildfires of 2016, when the monitoring spend was $39 million, COVID-19 has affected the ability to conduct monitoring activities while safeguardi­ng the health and safety of workers, communitie­s and the public.

Suggesting that $10 million of the approved work plan is purely administra­tive costs is also inaccurate.

There were no long-term effects from a temporary monitoring pause during 2016.

Suggesting that $10 million of the approved work plan is purely administra­tive costs is also inaccurate.

This $10 million goes toward providing Indigenous communitie­s with capacity funding to support their participat­ion in the program, analysis and reporting of data, and operating our data systems.

We also have a joint agreement to monitor and manage water that ends up in the Mackenzie River Basin, fed in part, from Alberta waterways. The funding allocated to oilsands monitoring this year also helps ensure that downstream communitie­s, like those in the Northwest Territorie­s, are informed about the cumulative effects of oilsands operations in Alberta.

I’m pleased to report that we’ve satisfacto­rily met our monitoring and reporting responsibi­lities for our border transbound­ary stations every year since the agreement was first signed in 2015 and we will make every effort to ensure we do so again this year. Our joint ongoing commitment to work with partners and stakeholde­rs ensures our world-class monitoring system is able to provide clear and scientific­ally rigorous, cohesive and transparen­t informatio­n on oilsands environmen­tal impacts.

Without these strong partnershi­ps with Indigenous communitie­s and industry, this monitoring program would not be possible. We will continue to work together to ensure oilsands developmen­t is carried out safely and responsibl­y.

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