The Telegram (St. John's)

Ball wants talks with feds about 2005 Atlantic Accord

- ST. JOHN’S

Premier Dwight Ball wants to meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to discuss how much the province has earned from offshore oil developmen­ts.

Ball says he has written to the prime minister asking for talks on the 2005 Atlantic Accord, which must be reviewed before April 2019.

The review will assess the extent to which the province has reaped majority benefit from its offshore resources and lasting economic gains.

It will also look at equalizati­on requiremen­ts and fiscal gaps between Newfoundla­nd and Labrador and other provinces.

Ball told an oil and gas industry conference Tuesday the time is now for these talks, as his Liberal government faces mounting debt.

“This review is timely in light of the fiscal challenges facing our province, our misnomer as a ‘have’ province under the current equalizati­on framework, and the lingering uncertaint­y around the federal government’s new environmen­tal assessment process,” Ball said.

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador became a “have” province in 2008 and stopped receiving equalizati­on payments, but was hit hard when oil prices collapsed in 2014.

Ball said he also has questions about the role of the joint regulator for offshore oil projects under the sweeping new national assessment bill introduced this month in the House of Commons. He said it’s vital that the province continue to have input through the Canada-newfoundla­nd and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board (CNLOPB).

“We need exploratio­n projects to go through the CNLOPB process rather than through the Impact Assessment Agency,” he said.

The proposed Impact Assessment Act would require that new energy developmen­ts be approved or denied within two years.

Environmen­t Minister Catherine Mckenna has said it will clarify how the process works along with what companies must do and how decisions are reached.

Under the new act, the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency would become the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada. It would review not just environmen­tal factors but also health, social and economic effects along with impacts on Indigenous rights.

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