Edmonton Journal

Province asked to restart oilpatch monitoring

- BOB WEBER

Seven environmen­tal and Indigenous groups have asked the Alberta government to restart oilpatch monitoring as soon as possible given that other activities are coming out of the COVID -19 shutdown.

In a letter delivered to the Energy and Environmen­t department­s Wednesday, the signatorie­s also urge the government to make public its decision-making criteria for when that work will begin again.

“We’re seeking that understand­ing and a commitment to fully restore (monitoring),” said Chris Severson-baker of the Pembina Institute, a clean-energy think-tank and one of the signatorie­s.

“Restore the requiremen­ts or be transparen­t about what decision-making criteria you’re going to use.”

Last month, the province’s energy regulator suspended a wide array of environmen­tal monitoring requiremen­ts in the entire oilpatch that were originally imposed as licence conditions. The regulator said the decisions were made to protect workers and communitie­s during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Companies no longer have to monitor fumes released by burning, or look for and repair leaks of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Surface water need no longer be tested, unless it escapes into the environmen­t.

Most soil and groundwate­r monitoring is gone. In-situ oilsands operations no longer have to conduct any wildlife monitoring or research. Reclamatio­n and wetland monitoring is also suspended.

Although some operations must resume Sept. 30, most suspension­s have no end date.

Severson-baker said that as the province releases guidelines on how businesses can safely reopen, it should do the same for environmen­tal monitoring.

“They haven’t articulate­d a plan,” Severson-baker said.

“Our assumption is that there is a plan. We’re pretty interested in understand­ing (it).”

He said signatorie­s anticipate being able to comment on it before it’s implemente­d.

Spokespeop­le for the Environmen­t and Energy department­s did not immediatel­y answer requests for a response.

Severson-baker said delaying monitoring longer than necessary will have an economic as well as environmen­tal cost.

In addition to concerns it would create among investors, he said, it would keep small consulting firms that do monitoring work from completing contracts out in the field. Other businesses are already opening, he noted.

“We hope the same clearance is extended to these sorts of (monitoring) activities.”

The letter was signed by the Pembina Institute, the Mikisew Cree First Nation, the Fort Chipewyan Metis, the Smith’s Landing First Nation, the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, the Alberta Wilderness Associatio­n and the Environmen­tal Law Centre.

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