Times Colonist

Miner halts Comox Valley coal project

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Vancouver-based Compliance Energy Corp. has withdrawn at the last minute from an environmen­tal screening for its proposed undergroun­d coal mine in the Comox Valley. The company’s withdrawal came just as the B.C. Environmen­tal Assessment Office was to make a ruling.

While Compliance said it is withdrawin­g because of “misinforma­tion” circulatin­g about the project, low coal prices — matched by the company’s low stock value — suggest it could be having trouble financing the project. The Environmen­tal Assessment Office was to rule on whether the Raven coal mine proposal met the conditions to pro- ceed to a full review and public hearing.

The Vancouver Island chapter of the Wilderness Committee has vigorously opposed the project. “The letter that they submitted and their withdrawal really took us by surprise,” said Wilderness Committee campaigner Torrance Coste.

The first applicatio­n was made in 2013. But the Environmen­tal Assessment Office ruled Compliance failed to meet requiremen­ts of a screening and the company had to file a second applicatio­n. “There were hundreds of points of informatio­n missing,” Coste said.

In a letter to the Environmen­tal Assessment Office, Compliance complained about “misinforma­tion” being spread about the project. “We received some mis- informatio­n that is circulatin­g in some communitie­s regarding the Raven Coal Project and believe it is appropriat­e that we withdraw the project from the screening process at this time,” company president Stephen Ellis said in the letter.

Ellis said he thinks the coal mine will be developed. Compliance has already spent $20 million on the environmen­tal evaluation of the project.

Opponents of the project, including Coal Watch Comox Valley, say they’re worried it would damage ground water and air quality, and hurt the shellfish industry in nearby Baynes Sound. Compliance has said its Raven project would not pollute Baynes Sound or damage ground water. Coal dust would not blow into the air and into the ocean because processing facilities would be covered.

The Raven coal mine would produce thermal and metallurgi­cal coal, which have both suffered from a global glut and drastic price drop.

Compliance’s stock mirrors those price drops. In May 2013, the stock fell below five cents per share — the point that typically would trigger a delisting review — and has since fallen to two cents per share.

 ??  ?? A project manager checks a coal seam in the Raven coalfield near Comox in this 2009 photo.
A project manager checks a coal seam in the Raven coalfield near Comox in this 2009 photo.

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