Calgary Herald

Ottawa backs off assessment­s

In situ oilsands mines not on federal list

- BOB WEBER

The federal government has confirmed it is backing away from assessing the environmen­tal impact of new oilsands projects, one day after acknowledg­ing it won’t come close to meeting greenhouse gas reduction targets.

A final list of the types of projects that will require a federal environmen­tal assessment was released Friday. The list contains no mention of in situ oilsands mines, which are expected to be the industry’s most common type of developmen­t in the future.

“This is the largest single source of (greenhouse gas) growth in the country and yet the federal government is not going to be playing a role there,” said Keith Stewart of Greenpeace.

On Thursday, Environmen­t Canada released a report con- cluding Canada is on pace to get halfway to its 2020 emissions target under the Copenhagen accord.

In situ mines involve heating undergroun­d bitumen deposits enough to soften them so they can be pumped up.

In some ways, they are considered more environmen­tally friendly as they do not require vast open pits or lake-sized tailings ponds of toxic water.

Environmen­talists have pointed out they still result in habitat fragmentat­ion on the surface through seismic lines and roads to wellheads. But their most significan­t impact results from heating the bitumen, usually through steam. Generating that steam burns a lot of natural gas, increasing the carbon intensity of the resulting barrel of oil.

The industry’s gradual shift toward in situ production is generally blamed for a recent rise in the average amount of carbon dioxide released per barrel of oilsands crude. About 80 per cent of the resource can only be recovered using in situ methods.

Alberta government figures say in situ production creates anywhere from one to 10 more kilograms of CO2 per barrel than open-pit mining.

Large expansions to existing open-pit mines will still be reviewed. As well, the federal environmen­t minister has discretion to call a review into any project.

All new oilsands projects will still be reviewed by Alberta.

A spokeswoma­n with the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers said industry welcomes the finalized list.

“The provincial government will still be doing a review and assessment and it’s equally stringent,” said Geraldine Anderson. “It’s basically a reduction in duplicatio­n.”

Environmen­tal lawyer Melissa Gorrie said the province seems to be tightening its idea of what needs to be reviewed. She said a recent decision means two in situ projects won’t have any public review at all after the province ruled local aboriginal groups weren’t directly affected by them.

“There’s been a lot of problems even getting hearings triggered for in situ projects in the province.”

In background documents, Ottawa says the goal of the changes is to “achieve more predictabl­e and timely project reviews, reduce duplicatio­n, strengthen environmen­tal protection and enhance consultati­on with aboriginal groups.

“The amendments to the regulation­s ensure federal environmen­tal assessment requiremen­ts are focused on those major projects that have the greatest potential for significan­t adverse environmen­tal effects in areas of federal jurisdicti­on.”

When asked whether projects not on the list would be screened to determine if a full review is needed — something that was proposed for consultati­ons in April — agency spokeswoma­n Isabelle Perrault said the decision on reviews would depend on informatio­n from sources such as the public, proponents, the provinces and the environmen­tal assessment agency’s regional offices.

The new environmen- tal laws cancelled close to 3,000 reviews the day after they were adopted in July 2012 to reduce what the government described as red tape and end duplicatio­n with provincial reviews. Gorrie said it’s a mistake to think in situ facilities don’t have significan­t impacts.

“Just because it’s not a big open-pit mine that everybody can see doesn’t mean that there aren’t significan­t impacts that need to be addressed and require an assessment.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada