Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Expansion of coal mine will need federal review

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2020 10:15 PM
  • Expansion of coal mine will need federal review

The federal environment minister is backtracking on a previous decision to keep Ottawa out of the approval process for a major coal mine expansion in Alberta.

The existing Vista mine, which is owned by the U.S. coal giant Cline Group, began shipping coal for export in May 2019 and the company is now looking to double, or possibly even triple, its output.

Minister Jonathan Wilkinson declined in December to order a federal impact assessment of the project near Hinton, saying the potential risks to the environment and Indigenous rights would be dealt with by a provincial approval process.

Dozens of environmental, Indigenous, health and faith-based organizations wrote to Wilkinson this month asking him to take a second look at the expansion.

In a decision Thursday supporting a federal designation for the project, Wilkinson says the expansion may cause "adverse direct and cumulative effects" on areas of federal jurisdiction, such as fish and fish habitat, species at risk, and Indigenous peoples.

The decision also notes that the mine expansion would produce more than 18,600 tonnes of coal per day, which is above the total production capacity threshold of 5,000 tonnes per day in regulations of the Impact Assessment Act.

"The minister acknowledges that, cumulatively, the projects may result in adverse effects of greater magnitude to those previously considered," the decision reads.

"(Those effects) may not be mitigated through project design or the application of standard mitigation measures."

In 2017, Canada and the United Kingdom jointly launched the Powering Past Coal Alliance, aiming to convince the world's wealthiest countries to eliminate coal as a source of electricity by 2030, and the rest of the world to do so by 2050.

When the alliance began, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called coal "the dirtiest of all fossil fuels.''

"Let me be very blunt about this. Coal represents perhaps the greatest challenge to the world not meeting its climate-change targets,'' Trudeau said. "Unless we reduce coal consumption, we are not going to be able to prevent catastrophic global warming.''

MORE National ARTICLES

City Council Appoints Surrey’s First Ethics Commissioner

City Council Appoints Surrey’s First Ethics Commissioner
The City of Surrey is the first municipality in British Columbia to establish the position of Ethics Commissioner.

City Council Appoints Surrey’s First Ethics Commissioner

Police looking for more victims and witnesses of man accused of sexual abuse at church

Police looking for more victims and witnesses of man accused of sexual abuse at church
A Coquitlam man is facing six allegations of historical sexual abuse involving three teenage boys and one young man. The suspect has been identified as Raymond Howard Gaglardi who is Caucasian, slim, has grey hair that may have been dyed brown, and is 165 cm and 154 lbs.

Police looking for more victims and witnesses of man accused of sexual abuse at church

Canada-US Border May Open Next Month, CoronaVirus Continues its Rampage in the USA

Canada-US Border May Open Next Month, CoronaVirus Continues its Rampage in the USA
Over 80% of Canadians wants to keep the US -Canada border closed for the foreseeable future. Amidst rising Coronavirus cases in the US- the Canada US border closure has been extended for the fourth time.

Canada-US Border May Open Next Month, CoronaVirus Continues its Rampage in the USA

Wolf culls do not help caribou recovery: study

Wolf culls do not help caribou recovery: study
A study says a government-sponsored wolf kill in Western Canada has had "no detectable effect" on reversing the decline of endangered caribou populations.

Wolf culls do not help caribou recovery: study

Nearly 270,000 Conservatives eligible to vote in leadership contest

Nearly 270,000 Conservatives eligible to vote in leadership contest
The national Conservative party says it has 269,469 members eligible to vote in the current leadership race.

Nearly 270,000 Conservatives eligible to vote in leadership contest

B.C.'s balanced budget surges to $12.5B deficit

B.C.'s balanced budget surges to $12.5B deficit
British Columbia's balanced budget has been shattered by the COVID-19 pandemic, with the province forecasting a deficit of $12.5 billion for 2020-21.

B.C.'s balanced budget surges to $12.5B deficit