Medicine Hat News

Coal exploratio­n around parks raises questions about future recreation

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON

At least five popular recreation areas in southern

Alberta are surrounded by coal exploratio­n plans and one of them has been partly given over to an exploratio­n lease, raising questions about their future with lovers of the outdoors.

“We’re not leaving a picnic table and a campground on the precipice of an open-pit mine,” said Katie Morrison of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society. “I can’t imagine that (parks) could continue if some of these mining plans go forward.”

A provincial spokeswoma­n said no developmen­t will occur in the parks.

Informatio­n released this week by the province shows about one-third of the

Oldman North provincial recreation area, a campground north of the Crowsnest Pass, is covered by an exploratio­n lease granted last August to Elan Coal Ltd.

“Any developmen­t would require notificati­on to Parks Division,” said a government email. “Any exploratio­n would be expected to avoid any entry into the (provincial recreation area), but you can see that the coal agreement does surround (and enter) parts of the park.”

Morrison notes that Elan’s plans show a mine pit almost on the border of Oldman North.

Maps compiled by environmen­talists show four other areas — Livingston­e Falls, Honeymoon Creek, Dutch Creek and Racehorse — have become islands in a sea of coal exploratio­n leases.

Exploratio­n typically involves drilling and road building. Mine constructi­on would only happen after regulatory review.

Alberta Environmen­t and Parks spokeswoma­n Jess Sinclair said the recreation areas are safe.

“No industrial developmen­t or exploratio­n will occur within any parks or public recreation areas within Alberta,” she said.

She said the Oldman North lease “lies outside the boundaries of the (recreation area) itself.”

Elan did not respond to a request for informatio­n, but its website says the company is committed to good environmen­tal stewardshi­p.

“We acknowledg­e the potential of our operations to impact water resources and will employ a proactive risk management approach to water management,” it says.

The five recreation areas are popular, said Neil Keown of Backcountr­y Hunters and Anglers. In good weather, the parking lot for Oldman North is full by 9 a.m., he said.

“From the motorized or random camping perspectiv­e, that entire region is exceptiona­lly popular. There are hundreds of anglers that descend on that stretch at any given time.”

The Alberta government is promoting metallurgi­cal coal developmen­t. It has rescinded decades-old policy blocking activity in a large swath of the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains and is reopening water allocation agreements with coal mines in mind. The policy decision is facing a request for a judicial review.

Environmen­t Minister Jason Nixon recently told outdoors blogger and webcaster Michael Short that parks are safe from coal developmen­t.

“They’re not being made into coal mines,” he said on Nov. 30. “That’s not happening. There’s strong laws to prevent that and rightly so.” Morrison wonders.

“(Nixon) either hasn’t looked closely where coal exploratio­n is happening in relation to these parks or he isn’t lining those two things up. We can see very clearly that there’s coal exploratio­n and activity happening right around these places and they will be threatened by coal.”

Research published this week identified the region being explored for coal mining as one of Canada’s environmen­tal “hot spots” — areas that have a high potential for recreation and which offer environmen­tal benefits such as biodiversi­ty and fresh water for millions downstream.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Steam billows from the Sheerness coal-fired generating station near Hanna in this December 2016 file photo.
CP FILE PHOTO Steam billows from the Sheerness coal-fired generating station near Hanna in this December 2016 file photo.

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