Cape Breton Post

Environmen­tal groups raise alarm

Possible changes to offshore assessment­s cause concerns

- BY MICHAEL MACDONALD

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appears poised to break a key election promise regarding the environmen­t, a coalition of about 20 environmen­tal and fisheries groups said Wednesday.

The Offshore Alliance, which includes members from Atlantic Canada and Quebec, staged a news conference and protest march in Halifax to raise awareness about a federal discussion paper that says changes are coming to the way environmen­tal assessment­s are handled for major offshore oil and gas projects.

The paper, released in June, says Ottawa is considerin­g streamlini­ng the process to have it handled by one agency instead of three separate authoritie­s — a recommenda­tion endorsed by the coalition.

However, coalition members said they are worried about a proposal that could see federal assessment­s conducted jointly with the federal-provincial offshore petroleum boards in Nova Scotia and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

“We don’t want the offshore petroleum boards to have any more powers over our oceans,’’ said Gretchen Fitzgerald, national program director with the Sierra Club Canada Foundation. “We feel that any moves to make this happen would be a broken promise from the federal government.’’

Fitzgerald said the regulatory boards should not be involved because their roles as industry promoters put them in a conflict of interest when it comes to protecting the environmen­t.

The federal government could introduce legislatio­n within weeks, Fitzgerald said.

“We need a process in Canada that is legitimate so Canadians can legitimate­ly feel that their oceans and environmen­t are being protected,’’ she said. “That’s what this government was voted in on, and they should keep that promise.’’

During the 2015 federal election campaign, Trudeau promised that a Liberal government would make environmen­tal assessment­s “credible again’’ by restoring oversight measures and ending the practice of allowing federal ministers to interfere in the process.

However, the federal discussion paper released last summer clearly states that so-called impact assessment­s for major offshore oil and gas projects could be conducted jointly with either the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board or the Canada-Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board.

The coalition believes the two unelected boards will not act in the public interest because each has a mandate to promote offshore drilling.

The East Coast Environmen­tal Law Associatio­n issued a statement Wednesday noting that an expert panel issued a report in April saying the boards have expertise in the management of oil and gas resources, but they do not have expertise in environmen­tal impact assessment­s.

“The choice to reduce the independen­ce of federal (environmen­tal assessment) by handing it over to regulatory board ... does not reflect the finding of the government­appointed expert panel,’’ the associatio­n said. “(This) would be considered by many a step backward in (environmen­tal assessment).’’

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A coalition of environmen­tal and fisheries groups protest potential changes to environmen­tal assessment­s for major offshore oil and gas projects in Halifax on Wednesday.
CP PHOTO A coalition of environmen­tal and fisheries groups protest potential changes to environmen­tal assessment­s for major offshore oil and gas projects in Halifax on Wednesday.

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