Edmonton Journal

Notley urges Kenney to reverse AER decision to cut monitoring

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Alberta Premier Jason Kenney should step in to reverse a decision by the province’s energy regulator to suspend most environmen­tal monitoring in the oilpatch, says the province’s Opposition leader.

The NDP’S Rachel Notley says if the United Conservati­ve premier doesn’t reverse the decision — which the regulator says was made because of the COVID -19 pandemic — it will cost jobs in the sector, as internatio­nal investors shy away from an industry increasing­ly seen as an environmen­tal outlier.

“(Wednesday) was a very bad day for people who care about our air, land and water,” Notley said Friday.

“The only people it was worse for were the people in Alberta who care about maintainin­g any kind of job or economic security within the oil and gas sector. It’s Albertans who need the jobs in that sector who will pay the price.”

On Wednesday, the Alberta Energy Regulator expanded previous monitoring suspension­s for openpit oilsands mines to include the entire oilpatch.

Companies no longer have to monitor fumes released by burning, or look for and repair leaks of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Surface water no longer needs to be tested, unless it escapes into the environmen­t — and that water no longer needs to be tested in a lab.

Most soil and groundwate­r monitoring is gone. In-situ oilsands operations no longer have to do wildlife, reclamatio­n and wetland monitoring, including research.

Most suspension­s have no sunset date.

Martin Foy, the regulator’s vice-president, has said the decisions were made to protect monitoring workers and the small communitie­s they visit.

Notley scoffed.

“The idea that we can force workers to work elbow-to-elbow at packing plants, have servers walk through restaurant­s with 50 people in them, but somehow it’s unsafe for environmen­tal monitoring experts to go out and test water and air?

“It’s the most ridiculous assertion I’ve ever heard.”

Notley pointed out that concerns over environmen­tal regulation in Alberta’s oilpatch were behind recent decisions of two of the world’s largest investment funds — Blackrock and Norges Bank — to restrict investment­s there.

Earlier this week, a U.s.-based investment research firm came to a similar conclusion.

“The Alberta government has become the oilpatch’s own worst enemy by weakening environmen­tal monitoring and oversight to the extent that foreign investors and foreign companies alike face reputation­al risks by investing in oilsands companies and projects,” said analyst Jackie Cook of Morningsta­r.

Kenney said he doesn’t control the regulator.

“It’s an independen­t regulatory body that makes its own decisions without direction from government,” he said.

Notley said the premier has plenty of authority to roll back regulatory rulings.

“They have every ability to direct the AER to undo this short-sighted and damaging decision.”

The regulator’s decisions this week were preceded by similar orders from cabinet. Environmen­t Minister Jason Nixon and Energy Minister Sonya Savage suspended environmen­tal reporting requiremen­ts in April.

“Jason Kenney has to take responsibi­lity for his extreme political decisions,” said Notley.

“Now we’re left with the Wild West of environmen­tal protection and oversight in Alberta. This is ideologica­l, it is thoughtles­s and the long-term consequenc­es are going to be very poor for our industry.”

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