Edmonton Journal

Ministers defend coal consultati­on plan after backlash

- BOB WEBER

Alberta cabinet ministers are defending the government's widely criticized plans to consult the public over open-pit coal developmen­t in the province's Rocky Mountains.

“Our goal is to ensure the government's approach to coal reflects the best interests of Albertans and will balance stringent environmen­tal protection­s and the approach to resource developmen­t,” said Energy Minister Sonya Savage in an email.

On Thursday, Savage's department released rules for the consultati­ons, which resulted from an outcry over the government's surprise plan for a massive increase in coal mining along the summits and foothills of the Rockies.

But those terms of reference limit what the five-member panel gathering the feedback can listen to. Presenters can only address issues that come under the authority of the department of energy.

Concerns over the destructio­n of a beloved landscape and the possible contaminat­ion of headwaters for most of the province's freshwater are off the table.

That's despite the fact that those issues have been the most commonly raised by Albertans. Thousands of hectares have been leased for exploratio­n as road building and drilling continue.

At the Alberta Urban Municipali­ties Associatio­n convention on Friday, Mayor Jim Willett of Coutts, asked Environmen­t Minister Jason Nixon if his department would supplement Savage's plans.

“We all thought a review of the coal policy would include a discussion surroundin­g water sources and usage and the land use act,” he said. “Is there a plan for another panel to discuss the points Albertans are most concerned about?”

Nixon appeared to suggest there's no need for one, saying the province's water management is unchanged.

“Nothing has changed when it comes to water licences, water approvals, the Water Act or environmen­tal legislatio­n when it comes to water around coal,” he said.

“All of the strict water rules remain within this province. They have not changed.”

Willett, whose municipali­ty is in south-central Alberta, called that a “non-answer.” He pointed out the government has opened discussion­s on water allocation­s in the area with a view to making the resource available for coal mines.

“We know it's being discussed. And if it's being discussed, why shouldn't we have some input on it?” he said. “Why is it such a narrow mandate that (the government) has given to the coal study group?”

Savage said concerns such as Willett's “go beyond the scope of coal.”

“This engagement is focused on how the province manages coal resources,” she said.

Savage said the consultati­on is designed to gather input around the protection­s for various land categories contained in Alberta's coal policy, which the government rescinded last spring and recently restored under public pressure.

Nigel Bankes, professor of resource law at the University of Calgary, said that's the problem.

“If this is all we're going to get out of this consultati­on, then it's a policy on developmen­t of coal, not a policy on the eastern slopes of the Rockies.”

The consultati­on is, he said, “incredibly narrow.”

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