Medicine Hat News

UCP to add some coal protection back in

Rescinded policy won’t return entirely but details to come next week: report

- BOB WEBER

The Alberta government says it plans to restore some aspects of a policy it revoked last spring that protected a wide swath of the province’s foothills and mountains from coal mines.

The move has provoked intense public protest.

There are no details on what the province is planning and there’s no promise that the public will have a chance to comment or influence any decision.

“There will be actions made on restoring restrictio­ns (or) policy,” Kavi Bal, a spokesman in Premier Jason Kenney’s office, said Friday.

“The specific policy implementa­tion is being finalized.”

Bal said an announceme­nt is to be made next week.

Energy Minister Sonya Savage did not respond to a request for comment. In an interview with Radio-Canada on Thursday, Savage said mountainto­p removal will be prohibited and that public consultati­on is possible.

The government has been hinting that changes are in the works to the unpopular plan to open up huge areas of previously unmined areas to openpit coal mining on the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains.

Communitie­s throughout the province’s southwest have voiced outrage and called for the old rules to be reinstated. Environmen­tal groups, ranchers and First Nations have taken the province to court in an attempt to get a judge to force the United Conservati­ve government to reconsider.

More than 100,000 signatures have been collected on petitions and prominent Alberta entertaine­rs from country singers Corb Lund and Paul Brandt to “Heartland” actor Amber Marshall have spoken against the idea.

On Monday, Savage said she and Environmen­t Minister Jason Nixon were “considerin­g other options to clarify the government’s approach and demonstrat­e the stringent environmen­tal protection­s that remain in place.”

The New Democrat Opposition withheld comment until the government outlines what it has in mind.

“We will have to see what she announces next week,” said spokeswoma­n Malissa Dunphy. “I’m concerned to hear that (Savage) is planning to announce a new policy without any public consultati­on.”

The previous policy, put in place in 1976 under Peter Lougheed’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves, took two years to develop.

Concern over Alberta’s intention to ramp up coal production has spread into Saskatchew­an, where much of the water that has its source in the Rockies ends up.

Opposition environmen­t critic Erika

Ritchie has written to Environmen­t Minister Warren Kaeding asking him to ensure Alberta lives up to interprovi­ncial agreements on water quality. She fears contaminat­ion of the South Saskatchew­an River, which much of her province depends on.

“I’m asking my government to look into it,” Ritchie said. “We need to understand what the potential implicatio­ns are.”

She points to a formal agreement between the two provinces that requires co-operation on water management when it affects both. “That does specifical­ly speak to collaborat­ion and consultati­on,” Ritchie said.

In an email, Kaeding said coal mines and other projects are carefully regulated and assessed.

“We expect proponents of any project to meet the rigorous standards that exist to protect the environmen­t.”

The Alberta government has changed waterrelat­ed policies before without letting other users know. Last summer, it temporaril­y suspended water monitoring on rivers that flow through the oilsands and into the Northwest Territorie­s without telling that jurisdicti­on.

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