National Post

Proposed coal effluent rules fall short: critics

- BOB Weber

• The federal government has bowed to provincial and industry lobbying in weakening proposed standards for coal mining effluent, critics say.

The draft regulation­s, released earlier this year, would double the amount of toxins — such as selenium — the mines are allowed to release and wouldn’t apply to any mine that starts producing before 2027. Nor do they require companies to monitor overall environmen­tal effects.

“Environmen­t Canada got pushback,” said Bill Donahue, an environmen­tal scientific consultant and former head of monitoring for the Alberta government. “It dramatical­ly reduced the proposed standards in terms of their stringency.”

Environmen­t Canada began reviewing its rules for coal mine effluent in 2017 and released a previous set of proposals in 2020. The current proposals are weaker in several respects.

They allow effluent to contain up to 20 micrograms of selenium per litre in any one sample and a monthly average of 10 micrograms. That’s twice as much as the previous proposal.

“Concerns were raised by industry and provinces over the achievabil­ity of previously proposed new mine limits,” the document says.

Selenium is an element closely associated with coal. It accumulate­s in the environmen­t and damages the ability of fish to reproduce.

Allowable limits for suspended solids, which damage fish habitat, would also be doubled — again in response to industry concerns.

As well, some contaminan­ts associated with coal mines such as sodium, antimony and chloride won’t have to be monitored, said Donahue.

Environmen­t Canada also proposes to exempt from the new rules any mine that starts producing within three years of them coming into effect. Since the rules aren’t expected to be proclaimed until the end of 2023 at the earliest, that means they wouldn’t apply to any mine that starts producing before 2027.

A federal official, who spoke on background, defended the proposed contaminan­t limits.

“It is a number that is meant to be met at the end of pipe (where) you’ve got 100 per cent concentrat­ed effluent. In the receiver, you’ve got some level of dilution.”

The selenium limits are intended to be a consistent national standard and provinces may attach more stringent standards to individual mine permits, she said.

She added the three-year delay before the rules take effect is to prevent companies with mines already in the planning stages from having to start over to meet new standard.

Environmen­t Canada is accepting public comment on the proposals until the end of March. Another 60day comment period is expected at the end of the year with a final version of the regulation­s scheduled for the end of 2023.

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