The Province

Habitat rules meaningles­s

Energy companies always get exemptions

- BOB WEBER

A leaked audit that revealed energy companies in northeaste­rn B.C. routinely ignoring rules for developmen­t on caribou habitat is no surprise to a local Indigenous group.

“We have concerns about how the (B.C. Oil and Gas Commission) regulates,” Katherine Wolfenden of the Fort Nelson First Nation said Tuesday.

Wolfenden helped with field work for the 2014 audit, which looked at dozens of well sites, roads, pipelines, seismic lines and other associated infrastruc­ture to assess how well energy companies followed the rules. The areas reviewed are all on Fort Nelson’s traditiona­l territory, which band members use extensivel­y.

Wolfenden said the band never got the report, despite asking for it in 2016 and 2017. A leaked copy eventually arrived anonymousl­y on her desk.

The audit concluded none of the pipelines or roads and only 38 per cent of well sites were following guidelines.

Well pads routinely exceeded the two-hectare limit. Auditors were told those were multi-well pads, but few had more than two wells and many of those were suspended.

Pits were often immediatel­y adjacent to the pads, which made them as large as seven hectares. There was little evidence of interim remediatio­n.

Seismic lines were conforming to the rules. But roads and pipelines were built side-by-side, which created long, straight lines through the forest up to 80-metres wide. Developmen­ts ran right up to water bodies with no buffer zones.

The audit found no way of measuring or limiting cumulative effects.

Wolfenden, who reviews developmen­t applicatio­ns for the First Nation, wasn’t surprised regulation­s seemed to have had little impact. The commission simply grants exemptions, she said.

“They’re widespread. I’ve seen a two-sentence letter saying, ‘We’re exempting such and such from this because it costs too much’ or ‘the timing’s not right.’

“In the history of (the commission) I don’t think they’ve ever not approved an applicatio­n.”

In an emailed statement Monday, the oil and gas commission defended its decision not to release the audit. It criticized the study’s methodolog­y and said it was outdated. It didn’t make anyone available to answer questions.

B.C.’s Department of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources didn’t immediatel­y respond to issues raised by the audit.

Charlotte Dawe of the Western Canada Wilderness Committee said well-meaning plans to protect the habitat of threatened caribou herds are being watered down throughout B.C.

“We’re constantly seeing plans released that are weaker than the federal (caribou) recovery strategy.”

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