The Guardian (Charlottetown)

WATER ACT TABLED

Long-awaited bill aimed at protecting P.E.I. water supply remains silent on deep-water wells

- BY TERESA WRIGHT Teresa.wright@theguardia­n.pe.ca

Long-awaited bill aimed at protecting P.E.I. water supply remains silent on deep-water wells

The province’s long-awaited Water Act has been tabled in the P.E.I. legislatur­e.

But while it will impose bans on fracking and export of bottled water, it remains silent on the controvers­ial issue of deepwater wells,

The bill has been over three years in the making, after concerns about P.E.I.’s water supply became the topic of heated public debate throughout much of 2014.

Since then, the province has issued a white paper and draft legislatio­n and held two rounds of public consultati­on to gather input on how P.E.I.’s groundwate­r supply should be monitored and regulated.

“This is an historic day for Prince Edward Island,” said Environmen­t Minister Robert Mitchell.

“One thing we all know that Islanders are very concerned and passionate about – water supply, water quantities on Prince Edward Island, how we treat our water, where we’re using our water. And I think all of those elements will be reflected in the Water Act.”

The act will prohibit hydraulic fracturing or “fracking” for oil or natural gas exploratio­n or production purposes. It also bans the removal of water from the province, such as the export or sale of bottled water.

The bill does not, however, deal with the current moratorium on high-capacity wells for agricultur­e. Mitchell says this will be dealt with in the bill’s regulation­s, which have not yet been released. No decisions have yet been made on the issue, as the department is awaiting the results of a scientific study that will measure the effects of deep-water wells on the province’s water table.

“We do not know the effects of withdrawal levels and to what degree that will affect aquatic life in our waters; that’s the most important piece,” Mitchell said.

“Once we have that figured out, we’ll bring it back, we’ll talk to Islanders and say, ‘What do you think of this and where should we move to next?’ ”

The question of whether to allow deep-water wells to be drilled and used for farm crops sparked intense debate over water use in P.E.I in 2014 and beyond, with environmen­tal advocates and the agricultur­al industry groups waging a public relations battle over the question of whether P.E.I. has enough groundwate­r to support

“We will know, as Islanders, where water is being used. Those will be recorded, the data will be online. From that, we can determine how much water we have, how much is being used, how much recharge is coming back, so we know exactly at every point in time, where our water situation is.” Environmen­t Minister Robert Mitchell

industrial irrigation of Irvingowne­d Cavendish Farms, which is one of the largest employers in the province. The P.E.I. Potato Board has openly lobbied government to lift the moratorium on high-capacity wells.

Mitchell says he is awaiting the results of the scientific study before any decision is made on whether to lift the moratorium.

But Opposition environmen­t critic Brad Trivers says he is concerned about the fact this will not be enshrined into legislatio­n and only placed in the regulation­s, which could be changed by government without the scrutiny of the legislatur­e.

“When it comes to regulation­s, typically the minister has the power to change those at any time,” Trivers said.

“We’re looking to see what ministeria­l powers are in the Water Act, how much is going to be in the legislatio­n and how much is going to be in the minister’s hands.”

Overall, Mitchell says the Water Act is aimed at ensuring P.E.I.’s groundwate­r is protected from contaminat­ion and monitored to ensure it is not withdrawn at higher levels than its natural rate of recharge.

“We will know, as Islanders, where water is being used. Those will be recorded, the data will be online,” he said.

“From that, we can determine how much water we have, how much is being used, how much recharge is coming back, so we know exactly at every point in time, where our water situation is.”

 ?? MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN ?? Environmen­t Minister Robert Mitchell says the Water Act, tabled in the legislatur­e on Thursday, is aimed at ensuring P.E.I.’s groundwate­r is protected from contaminat­ion and monitored to ensure it is not withdrawn at higher levels than its natural rate...
MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN Environmen­t Minister Robert Mitchell says the Water Act, tabled in the legislatur­e on Thursday, is aimed at ensuring P.E.I.’s groundwate­r is protected from contaminat­ion and monitored to ensure it is not withdrawn at higher levels than its natural rate...

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