Toronto Star

Canada ‘falling behind,’ CAPP says

Official defends Arctic drilling ban cited for lag

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

An oil and gas industry representa­tive says Canada is “falling behind” the U.S. and other nations in developing its rich Arctic natural resources because of a five-year moratorium on offshore drilling in the North put in place in 2016.

But Northern Affairs minister Dominic LeBlanc defends the ban as a necessary device to ensure the resource is developed in a way that is environmen­tally sensitive, allows Indigenous input and is based on science.

The debate touched off in 2016 when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and then-U.S. president Barack Obama announced offshore Arctic developmen­t restrictio­ns is being revisited at the Arctic Oil & Gas Symposium in Calgary.

Paul Barnes, Atlantic Canada and Arctic director for the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, says recent moves by the U.S. under President Donald Trump to reopen the Alaskan Arctic to drilling illustrate Canada’s “lost opportunit­ies.”

He says the ban on developmen­t creates uncertaint­y in the market and means Canada isn’t able to compete for investment dollars for drilling or research, despite ongoing developmen­t by Norway and Russia.

But LeBlanc says Ottawa is using its time to consult with northern people, government­s and industry and come up with a science-based report to inform its review of the moratorium in 2021.

“The developmen­t … must be done properly with the full support of scientific data and research,” LeBlanc said.

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