Vancouver Sun

B. C. gives conditiona­l nod to contentiou­s hydro project

- LARRY PYNN lpynn@vancouvers­un.com

The B. C. government has given conditiona­l approval to a run- of- river power project in the Upper Lillooet River Valley that received widespread public opposition, including from provincial wildlife biologists concerned over grizzly bear habitat.

Environmen­t Minister Terry Lake and Energy, Mines and Natural Gas Minister Rich Coleman have attached 37 conditions to Creek Power’s three runofriver hydro facilities 40 to 60 kilometres northwest of Pemberton producing a total of 121 megawatts of power. Among the conditions: • Maintain minimum in- stream flow requiremen­ts for North Creek, Pebble Creek and the Upper Lillooet River.

• Maintain for the life of the project a dedicated, publicly available project website to ensure public awareness of ongoing activities and constructi­on schedules.

• Make all monitoring reports prepared during operations available to the public on the website.

• Monitor temperatur­e and ice conditions for the life of the project.

• Undertake constructi­on activities outside of identified sensitive periods for wildlife.

• Contribute to the province’s regional grizzly bear monitoring program and participat­e in provincial­ly led access management planning.

• Implement a grizzly bear management plan, and other wildlife management plans, as part of a broader human- wildlife interactio­n plan.

The run- of- river hydro project poses a significan­t risk to a recovering population of grizzly bears in southweste­rn B. C., a provincial biologist warned in documents filed with B. C.’ s Environmen­tal Assessment Office.

Scott Barrett, ecosystems section head with the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations, predicted “multiple residual and cumulative effects to grizzly bears, creating high risk to recovery.”

In response to the province’s conditiona­l nod to the project, Gwen Barlee of the Wilderness Committee said Friday that the majority of the conditions are weak and unlikely to result in meaningful mitigation of environmen­tal impacts. She fears for fish stocks, including coho and trout, in the Lillooet drainage and a significan­t reduction in water flows over “iconic Keyhole Falls.”

The Environmen­tal Assessment Office found that the project is not expected to result in significan­t adverse effects, based on the mitigation conditions.

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