Close X
Monday, September 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta auditor general finds oilsands monitoring program lacking

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Oct, 2014 11:11 AM

    CALGARY - Alberta's auditor general says a report from the Alberta and federal governments on their much-vaunted joint oilsands monitoring program took too long to release and was flawed.

    Merwan Saher examined the first report from the Joint Canada-Alberta Plan for Oilsands Monitoring and said he found many elements lacking.

    "The report lacked clarity and key information and contained inaccuracies," he told reporters Tuesday. He said it was "disturbing" that the report covering the year ended March 31, 2013 was not released until June of this year, nine months after the targeted release date.

    "The lack of timeliness made the report less relevant," Saher said in the audit.

    Important events took place in the 15 months between the year's end and the report's release, including the establishment of the Alberta Environmental Monitoring, Evaluation and Reporting Agency (AEMERA) and the withdrawal of key First Nations groups from the plan.

    "Despite the significance of these events to the joint plan implementation and to Albertans, the report did not mention them because it only covered the period that ended on March 31, 2013. "

    In early 2012, Alberta and Ottawa announced a three-year plan to work together to track the oilsands' effects on air, water and biodiversity in northern Alberta. It has been described as a "world-class" system by politicians looking to blunt some of the attacks on the controversial industry, which have contributed to lengthy delays in getting new pipelines built.

    Oilsands operators are to provide up to $50 million to fund the program annually. During the program's first two years, the companies paid for the monitoring directly, but the government now has more control over that work.

    Saher said the first report contains inaccuracies and makes it hard to discern what tasks have been completed and whether the program is on track. He also flags weak project management on the part of the Department of Environment and Sustainable Resource Development, and poor communication between the two levels of government.

    A separate report released Tuesday by the federal environment watchdog, Julie Gelfand, took a more positive view toward the joint monitoring program.

    "We conclude that Environment Canada has implemented most of the projects we examined according to their 2013-14 timelines and budgets. The department has also established quality assurance and quality control procedures and standard operating protocols for each examined project," Gelfand said in her first report as Canada's commissioner of the environment and sustainable development.

    However, she said more should be done to consult First Nations and to incorporate traditional ecological knowledge into Environment Canada's monitoring activities. And she warned more clarity is needed on what the department's role in oilsands monitoring will be after March 2015.

    Saher did note some improvements since the program's first year, but those were not examined in the latest audit.

    AEMERA, the arms-length agency established in April that is now in charge of Alberta's role in the joint plan, said the auditor general has asked for a formal plan outlining how it intends to address his findings by Oct. 30.

    A number of steps have already been taken, it said. For example, its next annual report will be released in two phases to avoid unnecessary delays. A report on how the plan's implementation is coming along will be released later this week, and a separate one on the more scientific elements is expected to be released in February.

    "We think the auditor general's recommendations are valid and we're confident that AEMERA's going to address them appropriately," said Jason Maloney, a spokesman for Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development.

    Alberta NDP environment critic Rachel Notley said she's not holding her breath that oilsands oversight is going to improve under the governing Progressive Conservatives, especially with industry funding monitoring through a "fox-guarding-the-henhouse kind of model."

    "I think that the so-called world-class monitoring plan was always more about the press release than the delivery and the auditor general's review demonstrates that more clearly than almost anything else could."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Five killed in Calgary House Party Stabbing. Charged Teen is policeman's son

    Five killed in Calgary House Party Stabbing. Charged Teen is policeman's son
    Five people were killed in a stabbing rampage during a house party in the southwest Canadian city of Calgary early Tuesday. One suspect has been arrested, police said.

    Five killed in Calgary House Party Stabbing. Charged Teen is policeman's son

    Sri Lanka accuses Canada of misusing voluntary funds

    Sri Lanka accuses Canada of misusing voluntary funds
    The Sri Lankan government Tuesday accused the Canadian government of using its voluntary funds to the Commonwealth Secretariat as a political tool based on the dictates of electoral compulsions.

    Sri Lanka accuses Canada of misusing voluntary funds

    Vancouver Park Board Commissioner endorses free Wi-Fi in Vancouver Parks

    Vancouver Park Board Commissioner endorses free Wi-Fi in Vancouver Parks
    Vancouver Park Board commissioner Trevor Loke, will introduce a notice-of-motion at the regular board meeting tonight asking the city to monitor the possibility of providing free Wi-Fi at public parks. 

    Vancouver Park Board Commissioner endorses free Wi-Fi in Vancouver Parks

    Husband arrested in Jagtar Gill Slaying in Ottawa

    Husband arrested in Jagtar Gill Slaying in Ottawa
    The husband of an Indian-origin woman, who was found dead in her house in South Ottawa in Canada's Ontario province, has been charged with the first-degree murder of his wife.

    Husband arrested in Jagtar Gill Slaying in Ottawa

    900 Social Insurance Numbers stolen from CRA website due to Heartbleed bug

    900 Social Insurance Numbers stolen from CRA website due to Heartbleed bug
    Canada Revenue Agency says that approximately 900 social insurance numbers were stolen from its system due to Heartbleed bug. The federal tax agency stated in a press release Monday that the "malicious breach of taxpayer data" occurred over a period of six-hours.

    900 Social Insurance Numbers stolen from CRA website due to Heartbleed bug

    Vancouver celebrates a colourful and joyful Vaisakhi

    Vancouver celebrates a colourful and joyful Vaisakhi
    The annual Vaisakhi Nagar Kirtan celebrated with much joy and vigour in Vancouver once again displayed the generosity and togetherness of the Sikh community. Hundreds of thousands came out to celebrate the harvest festival that also marks the New Year and the birth of the Khalsa in 1699.

    Vancouver celebrates a colourful and joyful Vaisakhi