Medicine Hat News

Canada, Alberta agree on caribou protection deal

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON

Canada and Alberta have signed a deal on caribou protection that gives them years to take action but could allow energy drilling to resume on some ranges.

“I’m very concerned that developmen­t is in the fast lane, caribou conservati­on is slow,” Carolyn Campbell of the Alberta Wilderness Associatio­n said Friday.

The deal gives the two government­s up to five years to design and bring in range plans for some of Alberta’s most endangered herds, which rely heavily on remaining patches of undisturbe­d oldgrowth boreal forest. That same timeline applies to restoring habitat and to avoiding new disturbanc­es.

The plan envisions self-sustaining herds on healthy habitat some time between 50 and 100 years from now.

Campbell and Shaun Fluker, a University of Calgary law professor who follows environmen­tal litigation, agree the deal improves transparen­cy on conservati­on moves and opens a channel for federal funding.

But it will do little to change the immediate facts on the ground for caribou, said

Fluker.

“There’s nothing new in the details of restoratio­n and protection. It’s the same techniques they’re currently doing.”

Caribou conservati­on has been controvers­ial in Alberta and almost every other province for years, because habitat conservati­on is seen to conflict with forestry, and oil and gas.

The ranges of five of Alberta’s most threatened herds are between 70 and 80 per cent disturbed. Federal guidelines for healthy caribou habitat suggest the maximum is 35 per cent.

Despite the deal’s promises to protect and restore habitat, it also contains loopholes that allow Alberta to develop more of it.

“The agreement lacks interim habitat protection while range plan developmen­t is proposed to occur ... making it likely that critical habitat disturbanc­e and caribou extirpatio­n risk will continue to increase in the short-term,” said Campbell.

Oil and gas drilling as well as mineral exploratio­n may now resume on caribou ranges if it’s “in alignment with woodland caribou conservati­on and recovery objectives,” the plan says.

Alberta had stopped selling leases on those lands, Campbell noted.

She also pointed out the agreement, unlike an earlier draft, doesn’t rule out more timber harvesting on caribou range in the short term.

The deal was welcomed in a government news release from Alberta’s energy and forestry industries.

“It provides a framework to advance caribou conservati­on solutions in the context of Alberta’s complex cumulative effects landscape,” said Elston Dzus of Alberta-Pacific Forest Industries.

Tim McMillan of the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers suggested the agreement is good for everyone.

“Indigenous communitie­s, local government­s and industry can continue to forge a path forward that will help save Alberta’s caribou population­s and ensure a strong economic future for all Canadians with sustainabl­e oil and natural gas developmen­t.”

Alberta Environmen­t Minister Jason Nixon said in a statement that the deal prevents unilateral federal action.

“This agreement avoids the disastrous (sic) effects that would be brought on by an Environmen­tal Protection Order and underlines the importance of maintainin­g the province’s lead role in the developmen­t of a made-inAlberta solution that supports caribou recovery.”

Federal legislatio­n obliges Ottawa to step in to protect herds if provincial efforts are insufficie­nt. After the deal was announced, a lawsuit against Ottawa over its alleged failure to do so was withdrawn.

Federal Environmen­t Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said the deal, which includes “significan­t” federal funding, balances conservati­on and environmen­tal concerns.

“This agreement supports Alberta’s ongoing caribou recovery program and sets out clear caribou conservati­on, management and recovery measures with timelines,” he said in an email.

Ottawa has signed similar deals with British Columbia and the Northwest Territorie­s.

Caribou conservati­on is an issue for government­s across the country. A 2018 Environmen­t Canada report found little progress anywhere while 81 per cent of Canadian herds are in decline.

Alberta’s previous NDP government scaled back its own conservati­on plans over economic concerns.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Alberta has signed a deal with the federal government on caribou protection that will allow drilling to continue in certain ranges.
CP FILE PHOTO Alberta has signed a deal with the federal government on caribou protection that will allow drilling to continue in certain ranges.

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