Critics slam proposed oil exploration near Sable Island
HALIFAX — A call for energy companies to bid on exploration rights around Nova Scotia’s iconic Sable Island has prompted swift condemnation from a coalition of environmental, fishing and tourism groups.
The rugged and wild windswept sandbar in the Atlantic Ocean is a place of endangered species, wild horses and legendary shipwrecks. The Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board launched a competitive bidding process for two exploration licences to probe for fossil fuels in the shallow waters encircling Sable Island Monday.
“Sable Island is a massive, shifting sand dune adrift in the wilds of the North Atlantic, and we must safeguard its tenuous existence,” Gretchen Fitzgerald, director of the Atlantic Canada chapter of the Sierra Club Canada Foundation, told a news conference Thursday.
“This is a test for how we must change if we’re going to truly tackle climate change and protect global biodiversity.”
The board’s call came one day after Parks Canada wrapped up a survey about how to manage the Sable Island National Park Reserve, home to the largest colony of grey seals and the only known breeding location for the Ipswich sparrow.
Fitzgerald called it “absurd” that while the federal parks agency consulted Canadians about whether to allow camping and increased tourism on Sable Island, the provincial regulator moved ahead with plans to allow hydrocarbon exploration in the area.
“Sable is so special to the world and to us. One industry can’t be allowed to put that at risk.”
An alliance of environmental and industry groups wants the call for bids cancelled and an immediate moratorium placed on offshore drilling and a public inquiry to examine oil and gas development off Nova Scotia’s coast.
The regulator’s decision to call for bids, as well as the potential granting of an exploration licence, are both subject to review by the federal natural resources minister and the province’s energy minister. However, Premier Stephen McNeil said Thursday he supports the development of Nova Scotia’s offshore oil and gas industry.
“We believe in the offshore,” he said following a cabinet meeting in Halifax. “If there’s a resource there, we’ll continue to work with partners and invest heavily in geoscience.”
McNeil added: “We’re going to continue to look for activity off our coast.”
John Davis, director of the Clean Ocean Action Committee, a group that represents thousands of people who work in the fishery in southwestern Nova Scotia, criticized the province’s decision to spend millions on offshore geological and geophysical assessments.
“The power of the oil and gas lobby and the requirement for dollars for broke provincial governments ... creates a perfect storm,” he said, noting that the province is willing to put an “unbelievably beautiful and unique environment” at risk.