Lethbridge Herald

Phillips sounds alarm over coal mine queue jumping

- Tim Kalinowski tkalinowsk­i@lethbridge­herald.com

Lethbridge West MLA Shannon Phillips is sounding the alarm over the Kenney government’s attempts to allow coal mining companies to jump the queue to obtain water licences they currently have no right to in the Oldman River watershed.

“What the GOA has done is put forward a plan to take up to eight billion litres of Oldman River water above the dam which have been set aside under the Water Act because you need unallocate­d water volumes to support hold backs for drought, other environmen­tal conditions, and for other potential developmen­ts or irrigation stresses,” she explains.

“Essentiall­y what the GOA did, realizing Benga-Riversdale-Hancock for Grassy Mountain needs three billion litres alone, and they don’t have access to that under their current licences, was quietly going around running it past a few municipali­ties, and this leaked out in late 2020, of taking that set-aside and changing its allowable uses to industrial use — effectivel­y allowing Benga access at Grassy, and any other subsequent coal strip mining that might come as a consequenc­e of a regulatory approval for Grassy — to give them access to water they did not have access to under the normal functionin­g of the water market.”

The Oldman River, Phillips reminds readers, is a closed water system with a limited amount of volume available. The region is also prone to serious drought conditions at times. By taking this much reserve water out of the system to support coal mining,

Phillips says it has the potential to negatively impact the future growth of other industries, including agricultur­al irrigation and food processing, in southern

Alberta and even the future growth of local communitie­s themselves.

“Even if a municipali­ty wants to build a new subdivisio­n, let alone attract a new industrial developmen­t like Cavendish, you all of a sudden have far fewer options,” she explains. “We are talking about eight billion litres of water that gets moved from one use to another one.

“It’s a big deal. They (the UCP) went and did a back room, backslappi­ng deal (with coalmining companies) that puts the jobs we have now at risk. Whether you have sustainabl­e growth in other sectors going forward depends on whether they still have water.”

Follow @TimKalHera­ld on Twitter

 ?? Herald photo by Ian Martens ?? Open water flows past the icy banks of the Oldman River Wednesday in the city’s river valley. @IMartensHe­rald
Herald photo by Ian Martens Open water flows past the icy banks of the Oldman River Wednesday in the city’s river valley. @IMartensHe­rald

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