Lethbridge Herald

Province to reinstate monitoring

- Dean Bennett

Alberta industries, including the oilpatch, will resume environmen­tal monitoring and reporting in three weeks.

The Alberta government and its energy regulator have each issued orders for reporting to resume on July 15.

Testing and reporting had been suspended earlier this spring due to what officials called health and staffing concerns related to the COVID-19 pandemic, but Environmen­t Minister Jason Nixon says now is the time to resume, given the province is flattening the COVID-19 curve.

“The temporary reporting relief provided through Environmen­t and Parks allowed industry time to ensure the health and safety of staff and the communitie­s in which they work,” Nixon said Tuesday in a statement.

“Now that the public health emergency is no longer in effect and Alberta is reopening as part of our Phase 2 relaunch, industry can resume business while keeping communitie­s and employees safe.”

The Alberta Energy Regulator said it is also returning to normal processes, including providing opportunit­ies for public feedback on project applicatio­ns.

Environmen­tal critics, Indigenous groups and the Opposition NDP had been demanding the government reinstate the monitoring, questionin­g why it was shut down while other energy operations were deemed essential and allowed to continue.

The regulator suspended reporting and monitoring requiremen­ts in May that were originally imposed as licence conditions.

Companies did not have to monitor fumes released by burning, or look for and repair leaks of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Surface water did not have to be tested unless it escaped into the environmen­t.

Most soil and groundwate­r monitoring was also suspended and in-situ oilsands operations did not have to conduct any wildlife monitoring or research. Reclamatio­n and wetland monitoring was also suspended.

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