Lethbridge Herald

First Nations want answers on carbon plans

- Bob Weber

Seven Alberta First Nations have banded together to seek answers as industry and government move on billion-dollar plans to inject and store millions of tonnes of greenhouse gases underneath or adjacent to their traditiona­l lands.

“We don’t know how pumping carbon undergroun­d will affect our lakes, our rivers - even our undergroun­d reservoirs,” said councillor Michael Lameman of Beaver Lake Cree Nation, one of the members of the Treaty 6 working group. “(Industry’s) been vague, not very forthcomin­g.” The working group includes Heart Lake First Nation, Beaver Lake Cree Nation, Whitefish Lake First Nation, Kehewin Cree Nation, Frog Lake First Nation, Cold Lake First Nations and Onion Lake Cree Nation. Saddle Lake Cree Nation is observing the group.

“There’s lots to be checked as far as the project relates to both the safety of the environmen­t and the communitie­s,” said Darryl Steinhauer, consultati­on co-ordinator for Whitefish Lake.

“The (carbon capture) project is inclusive of eight Nations where people are not only practising their treaty rights but living there day to day. Safety is a big concern.”

Industry says it’s doing its best.

“We are in the early stages of consultati­on with communitie­s,” said a statement from Kendall Dilling, head of Pathways Alliance, which represents 95 per cent of Alberta’s oilsands production. “We are dedicated to working together with Treaty 6 First Nations and ongoing discussion­s will take place in a confidenti­al manner.”

A Pathways spokeswoma­n said the first projectrel­ated applicatio­ns are expected by the end of next month.

“Focusing initially on the proposed right-of-way for the CO2 transporta­tion network, Pathways now intends to target filing applicatio­ns under the Public Lands Act in (the first quarter),” Jerrica Goodwin said in an email.

Indigenous communitie­s, who watch the promotiona­l TV ads and hear the support from politician­s, say they feel the momentum building.

“We’re hearing a lot of concerns,” said Steinhauer. “(Councillor­s) are getting called in the evening about it, saying ‘Hey, what’s going on?’ ”

The bands would like to know.

“The Pathways Alliance has not provided our

First Nations with any reports or data assessing the potential risks associated with the storage of carbon adjacent to and beneath our reserve lands,” says an Oct. 13 letter from the First Nations to Pathways.

Pathways Alliance is proposing a gargantuan scheme to capture carbon dioxide from 13 oilsands facilities, pipe it hundreds of kilometres south and pump it from at least 16 injection wells to more than a kilometre undergroun­d. There, porous limestone underneath a layer of solid rock salt is to hold it fast.

The first phase is budgeted at $16.5 billion and will stash up to 12 million tonnes of carbon a year by 2030.

Depending on who’s measuring, that’s between 12 and 17 per cent of the oilsands’ annual emissions.

Advocates say projects such as the Boundary

Dam power plant in Saskatchew­an and Shell’s Quest project outside Edmonton prove carbon capture and storage can work.

Quest injects about a million tonnes of carbon dioxide undergroun­d annually.

Others say leakage - especially through poorly sealed oil and gas wells or into groundwate­r - remains a concern.

Alberta’s undergroun­d carbon tank is vast. A Pathways map suggests its proposed storage hub covers thousands of square kilometres of northeaste­rn Alberta.

That map does not show any reserve lands or

First Nations communitie­s, although there are 11 such areas within or adjacent to it.

“The map of the proposed sequestrat­ion hub â ¦ is premised on the notion that our First Nations and our reserve lands either do not exist or we simply don’t matter,” says the letter from the First Nations.

The approval process for the project also raises concerns.

Renato Gandia, spokesman for the Alberta Energy Regulator, said the agency will only review facilities that capture carbon, pipelines that transport it and wells that inject it. It won’t consider what’s injected or how it behaves after injection.

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