Lethbridge Herald

Feds too late saving whales

ENVIRONMEN­T WATCHDOG SAYS CANADA SHOULD HAVE ACTED SOONER

- Mia Rabson THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Canada’s environmen­tal watchdog says the federal government waited to take specific action to protect some of its most at-risk whales until the majestic creatures were already in great peril. Environmen­t Commission­er Julie Gelfand says Canada had the tools to safeguard North Atlantic right whales, Southern resident killer whales and other marine mammals from being hit by ships, tangled in fishing gear or losing their food sources — but it waited until after 12 right whales died in a single summer and the killer whale population was on the verge of extinction.

“I hope this is not too little, too late,” Gelfand said in her latest round of audits released today.

Her office also looked at how well Health Canada and Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada are controllin­g the risk of toxic substances and found there is still a long way to go.

Gelfand was pleased to see the government finally following its own directive to do strategic environmen­tal assessment­s of all policies, plans and programs considered by cabinet, including the potential economic, social and environmen­tal impacts.

In 2015, fewer than half of the 26 department­s and government organizati­ons that were supposed to be doing this actually followed through, and in 2016 and 2017 the number dropped to one-quarter. But in 2018, 93 per cent of the organizati­ons were doing it, although the auditors didn’t study the quality of the assessment­s done.

“In our view, this marks progress on the path to creating the balance that is required to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t,” Gelfand writes in her report.

Gelfand’s latest audits come just as Ottawa is trying to prove to the courts it is doing enough to protect the Southern resident killer whale in particular from risks, so it can go forward with a plan to expand the Trans Mountain pipeline.

Canada’s waterways are home to 40 different species of marine mammals ranging from whales and dolphins to seals and sea lions. Nine of them are endangered and another five are listed as threatened.

North Atlantic right whales were listed as endangered in 2005, but it took three years past the deadline to develop a recovery strategy. There are only about 450 North Atlantic right whales left.

There are just 75 Southern resident killer whales remaining. They were listed as endangered in 2003 but the plan to recover them wasn’t finished until 2017, four years late, Gelfand’s report says.

The audit says Fisheries and Oceans didn’t do anything specific to address the lack of food sources for the killer whales, namely Chinook salmon, until this past July.

Overall, Gelfand found Fisheries couldn’t say what it had done to protect 11 of the 14 whales that are endangered or threatened.

For the other three, including the North Atlantic right whales and Southern resident killer whales, the department’s own reviews showed the measures it had put in place to reduce things like noise disturbanc­es and fishing-gear entangleme­nts were not good enough.

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