The Daily Courier

Resource firms move ahead with United Nations compliance

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While British Columbia slogs through reforms to comply with a United Nations resolution on Indigenous rights, the private sector has been quietly embracing the benchmarks of its own accord.

B.C. lawyer Merle Alexander said he had worked on two deals between First Nations and resource companies in the past year, both complying in large part with the UN Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which B.C. committed to adopting in 2019.

Alexander, who acts as general counsel to the B.C. Assembly of First Nations and also represents a number of individual First Nations, said the “pre-compliance” deals involved a mining firm and an LNG industry group.

“Those industries are making significan­tly more progress than the public process,” said Alexander, who is a member of the Kitasoo Xai’xais First Nation. “Because, in a way, it’s sort of simpler because it’s a bilateral process, and there’s usually only a few parties involved in, say, an impact-benefit agreement negotiatio­n.”

He said he can’t disclose the participan­ts in the projects on confidenti­ality grounds.

But last June, the Tahltan Nation, the province of B.C. and Vancouver-based Skeena Resources reached a historic, consent-based agreement that made the Eskay Creek gold and silver mine the first project to have permits authorized by a First Nation government.

Nalaine Morin, Skeena’s vice-president of sustainabi­lity and the former lands director at the Tahltan Central Government, said the mining company had already been working with the First Nation for years on collaborat­ive consent-seeking, laying the foundation that made the agreement possible.

In January, the three parties came together again to sign a process charter for the approval process of Eskay Creek. The charter establishe­s the Tahltan Central Government as a key player in environmen­tal assessment and permitting.

Obtaining free, prior and informed consent of Indigenous communitie­s regarding the use of their lands is a cornerston­e of UNDRIP.

“That was basically from Day 1, “said Morin, who is a Tahltan Nation member. “They signed some of the first agreements – exploratio­n agreements, communicat­ions agreements – with the Tahltan Central Government,”

Morin said Eskay Creek is a redevelopm­ent project of a “brownfield” site occupied by a previous mine, which came with preexistin­g permits and an environmen­tal assessment certificat­e. Skeena only needed to amend the permits to redevelop, but a consent-based agreement needed a new, full environmen­tal assessment to be completed.

“Skeena agreed to do a full environmen­tal assessment,” Morin said. “They could have done an amendment. I see the work that we are doing today and into the future as redefining what constitute­s sustainabl­e mining in Tahltan territory.”

With Morin now a Skeena executive, she said the inclusion allows the Tahltan community to control the scope of projects involving its resources and lands like never before.

“I think we are going to end up with a project that is mindful of a lot of the values and the needs that Tahltan have as we design the project,” she said. “Whereas, quite often, nations have to do that work after the fact. They receive the applicatio­n to review. We are following a specific process that is inclusive of these principles.”

Skeena isn’t alone. Brian Sullivan, CEO of Conuma Resources based in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., estimated that more than 50 per cent of his duties now involve working on compliance with UNDRIP, First Nations communitie­s’ interests and regulatory compliance.

Conuma, which operates three coal mines in northeaste­rn B.C., works closely with four First Nations because its mines operate on Treaty 8 land, referring to territory covered by the 1899 agreement.

Sullivan said Conuma has impact-benefit agreements with all four nations it works with, but the company has been moving away from those types of deals because they are seen as “the bare minimum” for a company.

Instead, Conuma has now appointed an executive full time to Indigenous affairs who sits on an expenditur­e board that represents First Nation interests for every capital spending item involving the company.

“Without that fundamenta­l respect from the starting point, we don’t have that licence to operate in the Treaty 8 territory,” Sullivan said. He added that “we recognize that we have a period of stewardshi­p on that land and that it takes the co-operation of the resource companies, and the nations, and the regulators in order to do it correctly.”

Alexander said that business interest – namely, revenue – is a key reason private adoption of UNDRIP outpaces that of the provincial government.

By getting ahead of regulators in reaching deals with Indigenous government­s, companies can speed up processes and prevent costly delays or other disruption­s.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Members of the Squamish Nation wait in a 1950s exhibit room at the Museum of Vancouver before entering the room to sing and drum upon conclusion of a ceremony where the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) task force report was presented to the city of Vancouver.
The Canadian Press Members of the Squamish Nation wait in a 1950s exhibit room at the Museum of Vancouver before entering the room to sing and drum upon conclusion of a ceremony where the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) task force report was presented to the city of Vancouver.

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