Medicine Hat News

OVERTURNED

– Alberta’s top court undoes oilsands project approval

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EDMONTON

Alberta’s highest court has overturned regulatory approvals for a $440-million oilsands project that would have encroached on land a First Nation considers sacred.

In a strongly worded judgment, three Alberta Court of Appeal justices ruled that the Alberta Energy Regulator violated the honour of the Crown when it approved the proposal even though the developmen­t infringed on an agreement between the province and the Fort McKay First Nation.

“The honour of the Crown ... does require that the Crown keep promises made during negotiatio­ns designed to protect treaty rights,” wrote Justice Sheila Greckol.

“It certainly demands more than allowing the Crown to placate (the band) while its treaty rights careen into obliterati­on. That is not honourable. And it is not reconcilia­tion.”

The dispute arose over an area known as Moose Lake.

The band says it is the last place its members can go to practise treaty rights and live in a traditiona­l manner. Fort McKay, north of Fort McMurray, is surrounded on three sides by oilsands developmen­t and 70 per cent of the band’s traditiona­l territory is taken up by mines.

In 2001, the band began talks with the province to preserve Moose Lake and a 10-kilometre buffer zone around it. Former Alberta premier Jim Prentice signed a letter of intent with the band in 2015 and three years later Fort McKay thought it had a deal, although it was never ratified.

That year, the Alberta Energy Regulator approved Prosper Petroleum’s 10,000-barrel-a-day, steam-assisted bitumen extraction project that would come within two kilometres of the lakeshore.

The regulator argued before the Appeal Court that its mandate forbids it from considerin­g issues of Indigenous consultati­on. Nor could it consider deals not yet in force.

Not good enough, said the court.

“The public interest mandate can and should encompass considerat­ions of the effect of a project on Aboriginal Peoples,” wrote Justices Barbara Veldhuis and Jo’Anne Strekaf. “To preclude such considerat­ions entirely takes an unreasonab­ly narrow view of what comprises the public interest.”

The regulator was also wrong to say that cumulative effects of developmen­t are beyond its purview, Greckol wrote.

“The Crown has long been on notice that the piecemeal approach to addressing (the band’s) concerns through consultati­on on individual projects has not adequately considered the cumulative effects of developmen­t.”

Fort McKay Chief Mel Grandjamb said he was “ecstatic” with the ruling, which he suggested will change the relationsh­ip between First Nations and Alberta’s energy regulator.

“In the past years, they grouped us together with the general public and called us stakeholde­rs. Treaty rights were never addressed. This is going to change that.”

The province has continued to talk with the band. Grandjamb said he’s pleased with the discussion­s and expects a final settlement on Moose Lake in the coming months.

An email from Prosper CEO Brad Gardiner said the ruling reflects problems with Alberta’s energy regulation.

“This decision reflects a failure of the regulatory framework for the energy industry and a failure of the Crown to address the concerns of Fort McKay First Nation. These issues need to be addressed by the government.”

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