Edmonton Journal

NDP blasts pilot project on fracking

Says government working with oilpatch to reduce regulation­s

- MARTY KLINKENBER­G mklinkenbe­rg@martykej

Alberta’s NDP is concerned that the provincial government is working with oil and gas executives to reduce regulation­s related to the controvers­ial process of fracking.

A government document obtained by the NDP shows Alberta’s Energy Regulator is scheduled to meet next week with industry officials to discuss a pilot project that will reduce regulation­s and streamline the applicatio­n process for fracking and other forms of unconventi­onal oil and gas developmen­t.

The informatio­n session on June 17 is meant to brief industry representa­tives on regulation­s that will be tested in the Fox Creek area beginning in September. Representa­tives from Alberta’s Environmen­t and Energy department­s will also attend the meeting, the document shows.

“At the same time government is selling itself as being a steward of the environmen­t, it is working behind closed doors to undermine the integrity of our environmen­tal regime,” NDP critic Rachel Notley said Thursday. “It is the type of game-playing you expect from a tired, 40-year-old government that is not going to change.

“Making major changes to regulation­s that govern fracking shouldn’t be done behind closed doors with a bunch of industry insiders, it should happen in public. Albertans deserve better than this.”

Bob Curran, a spokesman for the Alberta Energy Regulator, said the regulation­s on trial will apply only to developmen­t in the Fox Creek area, site of a geological formation estimated to contain 443 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 61.7 billion barrels of oil.

“Let’s be clear: this is a draft for a pilot, brought about predominan­tly by landowner concerns that we have heard about for years,” Curran said in an email. “A pilot project, by definition, is designed to test draft regulation­s.

“We are not changing the regulation­s, nor are we proposing changes at this time. We are putting together a pilot project. That is all.”

According to the document obtained by the NDP, a final version of the regulation­s under review is scheduled to be released on June 27.

A recent draft of the pilot project describes it as “the start of a change in the way that the AER regulates the energy sector.”

The regulation­s being tested “are intended to reduce the burden placed on industry” and “manage risks to achieve play-based objectives and Government of Alberta policy outcomes.”

The regulation­s to be tested propose a single applicatio­n process that authorizes activities carried out over the lifetime of a project, and tasks approval-holders with reporting requiremen­ts.

“Overall the intent (of the approach) is orderly and responsibl­e developmen­t,” the draft says.

Curran said if government decides to implement regulatory changes based on the pilot project, the proposed changes will be made public and an opportunit­y will be provided for feedback.

Notley believes government has already made up its mind, however.

“If the pilot project is successful, it will serve as a template for future developmen­t,” she said. “There is no question the rules that will govern this type of thing are already a long way down the road.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada