The Telegram (St. John's)

Explorator­y wells offshore get exemption

- DAVID MAHER THE TELEGRAM david.maher@thetelegra­m.com @Davidmaher­nl With files from Juanita Mercer

Federal Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’regan says a federal exemption of explorator­y wells in the province’s offshore oil and gas industry will ensure the industry is competitiv­e after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Federal Environmen­t Minister Jonathan Wilkinson introduced the exemption on Thursday.

The move means explorator­y drilling in a specific area of the province’s offshore is excluded from a project-specific impact assessment.

O’regan says the move means the wait time from proposal to drilling has gone from upwards of 900 days to as little as 90 days.

He says the move comes at a difficult time for the industry.

“I know that this is a challengin­g time for everyone in this country. It’s a particular­ly challengin­g time for people in Canada’s oil and gas industry right across the country,” O’regan told reporters in St. John’s.

“The double-whammy of COVID’S demand devastatio­n — we’re not flying as much, we’re not driving as much — and then global price instabilit­y that we’re still reeling from Russia and Saudi Arabia, it has shaken oil producers and pulled back investment right across this country and around the world.”

The change only applies to explorator­y drilling. Oil and gas projects will still need to undergo project specific assessment­s.

NO CASH FOR INDUSTRY — YET

The announceme­nt was not accompanie­d by direct support for the industry in terms of subsidies. O’regan says he’s hopeful such an announceme­nt will be coming “very soon.”

In a statement, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Oil and Gas Industry Associatio­n (Noia) CEO Charlene Johnson says the move is welcome — but lacking financial supports to help the industry.

“Since the regional assessment review process began over a year ago, COVID-19 has devastated our industry.

While the announceme­nt today allows us to be globally competitiv­e on timelines, the Government of Canada needs to take action to also be fiscally competitiv­e with internatio­nal jurisdicti­ons,” reads a statement from Johnson.

“To achieve this, we ask the federal government for urgent action to introduce incentives to attract offshore exploratio­n and to encourage developmen­t projects to proceed and get thousands of people back to work. We need this action now.”

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Ches Crosbie concurs with Johnson’s statement.

“Offshore petroleum industry participan­ts and provincial legislator­s alike agree that we desperatel­y need exploratio­n drilling incentives for jobs and prosperity. Today’s announceme­nt by O’reagan concerning shorter timelines for drilling permits was expected, but useless if there is no exploratio­n to permit,” wrote Crosbie, in a release.

Jordy Thomson, with the

Ecology Action Centre, says the organizati­on filed court challenges to the regulation­s. The group wants to see the regulation­s sent back to the federal government for further review.

“The big thing that’s missing here is a long-term perspectiv­e and cumulative effects analysis. So basically, business as usual, we can’t continue on with that,” said Thomson.

“We have to make sure we’re evaluating these project decisions in the context of everything else that’s going on in the marine environmen­t both now and in the future. And that was one of the things that this regional assessment was supposed to do, but it failed to do that.”

Sigrid Kuehnemund, vicepresid­ent of ocean conservati­on with Wwf-canada, says the changes put marine habitats at risk of environmen­tal damage.

“We think that this regulation is not good for the environmen­t because it is based on a flawed regional assessment, and that assessment didn’t properly consider the impacts of explorator­y drilling on the environmen­t, and it didn’t properly consider the impacts on Canada and provincial climate change targets,” said Kuehnemund.

“So, with this regulation, it truly damages Canada’s and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s ability to reach net zero emissions by 2050, and also puts many sensitive marine habitats at risk. So, we contest the assertion that this regulation is good for the environmen­t.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Federal Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’regan says new changes coming could mean as little as 90 days will be needed to go from a proposed well to drilling in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s offshore sector.
CONTRIBUTE­D Federal Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’regan says new changes coming could mean as little as 90 days will be needed to go from a proposed well to drilling in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s offshore sector.
 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? The Hibernia offshore platform.
FILE PHOTO The Hibernia offshore platform.

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