Lethbridge Herald

AER says $260B energy cleanup based on ‘worse-case’ scenario

- Dan Healing

The Alberta Energy Regulator is apologizin­g for estimating it would cost $260 billion to clean up after the provincial oil and gas industry. The sector’s accumulate­d environmen­tal liability is currently estimated at $58.65 billion, less than one quarter of the presented number, it said in a statement Thursday.

“The numbers are staggering — $260 billion in total liability, which is $200 billion more than we have consistent­ly reported,” it stated.

“This particular estimate was created for a presentati­on to try and hammer home the message to industry that the current liability system needs improvemen­t. While the message to address liability is important, the numbers were not validated and were based on a hypothetic­al worst-case scenario.

“Using these estimates was an error in judgement and one we deeply regret.”

The $260 billion is mentioned in speaking notes for a presentati­on in February by Robert Wadsworth, the AER’s vice-president of closure and liability, as initially obtained by the National Observer after a request under freedom of informatio­n legislatio­n

The AER provided the same documents to The Canadian Press on Thursday.

In a graphic illustrate­d by a huge cartoon bag of money, the presentati­on estimates Alberta’s liabilitie­s at $130 billion for mining projects, $100 billion for convention­al oil and gas and steamdrive­n oilsands, and $30 billion for pipelines.

“The money bags are to scale,” it says. “There is a bag for security, it is just very hard to see.”

Issues emerging from the presentati­on are being examined by Environmen­t Minister Shannon Phillips, said Premier Rachel Notley on Thursday.

“It’s a problem that has accrued over, I guess now we’d be talking 47 years, but it’s not one that happened overnight and, unfortunat­ely, it’s not one that we can fix overnight,” she told reporters.

She said the government is having talks with industry about the situation and is taking care to avoid approving projects that will add to the liabilitie­s going forward.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? The Syncrude oilsands extraction facility is reflected in a tailings pond near the city of Fort McMurray on June 1, 2014. The Alberta Energy Regulator says it doesn’t agree with a presentati­on given by a senior executive earlier this year that pegged the cost of cleaning up after the oil and gas industry at $260 billion.
Canadian Press photo The Syncrude oilsands extraction facility is reflected in a tailings pond near the city of Fort McMurray on June 1, 2014. The Alberta Energy Regulator says it doesn’t agree with a presentati­on given by a senior executive earlier this year that pegged the cost of cleaning up after the oil and gas industry at $260 billion.

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