The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Bad public policy chokes economic growth

Nova Scotia’s ban on fracking isn’t supported by evidence; severely curtailed spending and job creation

- Gerard Lucyshyn Gerard Lucyshyn is the vice-president of research and a senior research fellow for Frontier Centre of Public Policy.

With an estimated 1.6 trillion cubic feet of natural gas under foot, Nova Scotian policy-makers are choking out economic growth potential with bad public policy.

Their hasty decisions regarding the not-so-new technology of hydraulic fracturing (or fracking, which has been around since the 1950s) were justified by claiming to have been based on incomplete, unavailabl­e or unobtainab­le informatio­n.

It appears the fear of the unknown sent policy-makers retreating to a better-safe-thansorry policy on fracking. This type of politicall­y-fuelled phobicthin­king continuall­y smothers the economic potential of Nova Scotia. It contribute­s to its economic woes and costs Nova Scotians millions of dollars a year in opportunit­y costs.

In 2014, the Wheeler commission published the Report on Nova Scotia Independen­t Panel on Hydraulic Fracking. The commission’s mandate was to assemble a panel of experts, conduct public consultati­ons, and perform a literature review on the health and socio-economic impacts of hydraulic fracturing. The commission was intended to help provincial policy-makers make an informed decision on the future of fracking in Nova Scotia.

The 387-page report concluded “that the province is not able to make fully informed decisions either for or against the developmen­t of unconventi­onal gas and oil resources by hydraulic fracturing at the present time.”

Despite the inconclusi­ve nature of the report, the commission proposed four scenarios if Nova Scotia engaged in fracking. Using “reasonable assumption­s drawn from analogous geologies,” the commission’s lowermediu­m scenario proposed drilling 100 wells a year over 40 years. This modest plan would yield $1 billion in annual spending, of which approximat­ely $333 million a year would be directly spent in Nova Scotia’s economy. It would mean the creation of 750 to 1,500 full-time jobs across Cumberland, Colchester, Harris and Pictou counties.

The commission said that due its “funding constraint­s” it was unable to model the costs of externalit­ies in as much detail as the potential benefits. Further modelling was recommende­d as an immediate research priority. This seems to never have occurred.

The range of potential externalit­ies the commission examined included exposure to toxic materials, contaminat­ion of drinking water sources, atmospheri­c exposure and mental health.

Fracking has been around for at least 60 years, yet the commission indicated it didn’t have sufficient funding to further examine these externalit­ies and that such impacts are not known.

But the commission did report that it was unable to find any long-term and cumulative public health impacts and found “no evidence of catastroph­ic threats to public health in the short-tomedium term that would necessitat­e the banning of hydraulic fracturing outright.”

It appears a simple listing of a “range of potential unquantifi­ed economic costs that could accrue” was sufficient for policymake­rs to continue the ban.

In the meantime, policy-makers need to consider at least one quantifiab­le economic cost: the opportunit­y cost of banning fracking. Alarmist decision-making and inconclusi­ve findings of the commission have cost Nova Scotians at least $333 million a year in lost spending.

Since the commission’s report five years ago, the ban on fracking has choked nearly $2 billion out of the Nova Scotia economy, along with 750 to 1,500 full-time jobs across four counties.

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