Medicine Hat News

Miner ponders impact of restoring coal policy

- BOB WEBER

A coal-mining company with exploratio­n leases in Alberta’s Rocky Mountains is trying to figure out how the government’s decision to restore protection of the land will affect its plans.

“I’m not sure specifical­ly or exactly what it means for our business,” said Brad Johnston, chief developmen­t officer for Cabin Ridge, a Calgary-based, privately held company that holds exploratio­n permits granted last fall on coal leases north of Coleman, Alta.

“What has the government actually told us? he asked.

“When we get more clarity on this, we’ll be able to understand what it is the regulator is saying that we can and can’t do. Right now, I don’t know the answer to that question.”

On Monday, Energy

Minister Sonya Savage bowed to intense public pressure and reinstated a policy that has protected the mountains and foothills from surface coalmining since 1976.

Savage said exploratio­n permit holders will be able to go ahead with activity such as drill sites and roads. But she also said the province’s energy regulator has been told that “mountainto­p removal” is not allowed.

Cabin Ridge is a member of the Coal Associatio­n of

Canada, which Johnston said has asked to meet with the government.

“We’ve asked for a meeting with the (Alberta Energy Regulator) to seek clarity on what some of these terms mean,” said Johnston. “We would like to have a meeting with the policy-makers for the same reason.”

He said he’s not sure his company will go ahead with exploratio­n work for which it already has permits.

“That’s part of our assessment. I would like to think we’re going to proceed. We have a valid permit and we don’t see that we’re doing something that’s not transparen­t, that’s not heavily regulated.”

Johnston said Cabin Ridge was not given a heads-up by the government before the announceme­nt. But he wasn’t entirely surprised.

“It’s an about-face. But in many regards, with the feedback that the government was getting from a variety of stakeholde­rs, perhaps a reset was appropriat­e.”

The pushback was fierce and came from small-town mayors, the city of Lethbridge, environmen­talists, ranchers and country singers. More than 100,000 signatures were collected on petitions.

Johnston still believes Albertans can be persuaded that there’s a place for surface coalmining on one of the province’s most-loved landscapes.

“We have a viewpoint that what we do is environmen­tally responsibl­e,” he said. “What we do can be and is sustainabl­e.”

He knows Albertans have questions. “Some of these questions are very legitimate, but that’s something that’s the outcome of the work we’re going to do. The outcome of that work will answer those kinds of questions.”

He said the company won’t have a preliminar­y economic assessment until June. It might be two years before Cabin Ridge knows how it wants to proceed.

Until then, Johnston said, the company is happy to participat­e in whatever public consultati­on the government devises.

“It’s fair for people to understand what this means. We want to work with these groups to provide that clarity, to answer questions that are put to us, in a respectful way. These are good things.”

However, clarity begins at home, Johnston suggested. A little explanatio­n of what the government has in mind would be useful, he said.

“There’s a reassessme­nt that we have to undertake to try and figure out what (the announceme­nt) means for us. It’s early days.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? A Calgary coal mining company with leases in the Rockies is looking for answers after the province announced it will reinstate the protection­s from the 1976 Coal Policy, which had been repealed last year.
CP FILE PHOTO A Calgary coal mining company with leases in the Rockies is looking for answers after the province announced it will reinstate the protection­s from the 1976 Coal Policy, which had been repealed last year.

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