Close X
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

From Hey Rosetta to Joseph Boyden, artists want buffer around Gros Morne park

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2015 10:41 AM

    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Canadian artists, writers and musicians ranging from Hey Rosetta to novelist Joseph Boyden are pushing for action to protect Gros Morne National Park in western Newfoundland.

    They've signed an open letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Premier Paul Davis urging a buffer zone to prevent hydraulic fracturing and other development near the UNESCO world heritage site.

    Gros Morne received that designation from the United Nations in 1987 and draws thousands of visitors each year. Its famous hiking trails wind through thick forests and across stunning clifftop views over glacier-cut fjords.

    Its 1,800 square kilometres also feature geological wonders such as the Tablelands that have helped scientists understand how the Earth's outer shell has shifted over millions of years.

    "Gros Morne National Park is one of the national treasures that make us proud to be Canadians," says the letter dated Jan. 5 and publicly released Monday.

    "We were shocked, therefore, to learn about a proposal in 2013 to conduct oil drilling and hydraulic fracturing (fracking) activities next to the park, considering the threat that this would pose to its ecosystems, its pristine natural beauty, and the thriving local tourism economy."

    The letter urges Harper and Davis to help create a buffer zone around Gros Morne "that will be kept permanently free from industrialization."

    Its 32 signatures include those of astronaut Roberta Bondar, writer Lawrence Hill of "The Book of Negroes," musician Tim Baker of Hey Rosetta and actor Greg Malone of "Codco."

    The letter is copied to the UNESCO World Heritage Committee. It recommended last June that the federal government create a permanent protective zone around the park.

    Neither the Prime Minister's Office nor the premier responded to requests for comment.

    The province announced in November 2013 a temporary halt to potential fracking applications while it internally reviewed regulations and potential impacts. While the government had received no formal proposals to frack wells, exploration licences granted in what's known as the Green Point shale near Gros Morne touched off intense debate.

    Many residents raised concerns about groundwater pollution and other risks. Hydraulic fracturing or fracking pumps massive volumes of water combined with nitrogen, sand and chemicals at high pressure to shatter shale rock, allowing gas or oil to flow through well bores to the surface.

    It's believed Newfoundland's west coast has deep shale formations that hold potentially huge reserves of oil, unlike more shallow coalbed gas deposits in western Canada and parts of the U.S.

    The provincial Progressive Conservative government has stressed it puts health and environmental safety first but wants a balanced approach to industrial development.

    Groups such as the Newfoundland and Labrador Oil and Gas Industries Association say thousands of wells have been fracked in western Canada without environmental damage.

    But the Council of Canadians and other critics warn a lack of independent research and baseline measurements before and after fracking cast doubt on any safety assurances.

    Last October, the province named a five-member external panel with environment, geology, engineering and public health expertise to report within a year on the implications of fracking in western Newfoundland.

    Eric Hebert-Daly, executive director of the watchdog group Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, helped co-ordinate the open letter as part of a broader campaign for a Gros Morne buffer.

    The park's coveted UNESCO status depends in part on its preservation, he said in an interview.

    "This seems like a no-brainer. We really just need to find the time and the effort on the part of both governments to find the solution to what that buffer zone needs to look like, and get on with it."

    Malone said Gros Morne is a place like no other, especially as development erodes what remains of the globe's wilderness.

    "Encroaching on the very few areas we have preserved as outstanding examples of the natural world is just, in my view, unacceptable greed," he said in an interview. "We don't need to do that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Nurses Ask Province For Medical Tourism Info

    Ontario Nurses Ask Province For Medical Tourism Info
    TORONTO - The Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario is asking the provincial government for information on which hospitals are letting foreign patients pay for health care.

    Ontario Nurses Ask Province For Medical Tourism Info

    Russia Upset Over Canadian Visa Denials For Space Conference

    Russia Upset Over Canadian Visa Denials For Space Conference
    Canada's refusal to allow Russian delegates to attend a prestigious international astronautical symposium has angered Moscow, which said the decision flies in the face of international space co-operation and amounts to politicizing space exploration over the conflict in Ukraine.

    Russia Upset Over Canadian Visa Denials For Space Conference

    Magnotta Trial: Jury Looks At Photos Of Parcels Mailed To Ottawa, Vancouver

    Magnotta Trial: Jury Looks At Photos Of Parcels Mailed To Ottawa, Vancouver
    The jury in Luka Rocco Magnotta's first-degree murder trial took a closer look on Tuesday at photos of parcels that were mailed to political offices in Ottawa and schools in Vancouver.

    Magnotta Trial: Jury Looks At Photos Of Parcels Mailed To Ottawa, Vancouver

    Seven Rescued From Sinking Fishing Vessel Off B.C. Coast

    Seven Rescued From Sinking Fishing Vessel Off B.C. Coast
    VICTORIA - Two adults and five young children had to be rescued on Monday night off the B.C. coast when their fishing vessel began sinking.

    Seven Rescued From Sinking Fishing Vessel Off B.C. Coast

    Ernst & Young agrees to pay $8 million to settle with Ontario regulator

    Ernst & Young agrees to pay $8 million to settle with Ontario regulator
    TORONTO - Ernst & Young LLP has agreed to pay $8 million in two settlements with the Ontario Securities Commission, which accused the firm of mishandling the audits of two Chinese companies, including Sino-Forest Corp.

    Ernst & Young agrees to pay $8 million to settle with Ontario regulator

    Woman who killed herself in CBSA custody feared torture in Mexico

    Woman who killed herself in CBSA custody feared torture in Mexico
    Just days before she hanged herself in December 2013, Lucia Vega Jimenez cut fruit and chatted about international Christmas traditions with inmates inside a maximum-security women's prison east of Vancouver.

    Woman who killed herself in CBSA custody feared torture in Mexico