FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Environmental Groups Praise Landmark Step Towards Responsible Coalbed Methane Development
The B.C. government has taken a landmark step in resolving concerns around coalbed methane (CBM) development, according to environmental groups.
Their comments follow the B.C. government's announcement on Friday of a two-year moratorium on CBM drilling in the Sacred Headwaters in the province's Northwest.
Conflict around CBM is proving costly to government and industry. "It's
undermining investor confidence and has stopped almost every attempt to produce
CBM in B.C.," says Merran Smith, Climate Director at ForestEthics. "Creating
space to resolve conflict and determine where and how to proceed is the only
pragmatic solution."
Due to harmful impacts on land, water and wildlife, only some CBM reserves can
be developed safely. Until now, British Columbia has generally granted CBM tenures
without assessing whether communities are willing to accept these impacts.
"Kudos
to the government for recognizing that Northwest residents have a right to
decide whether CBM development happens in their watersheds," says Eric
Swanson, Corporate Campaigner at the Dogwood Initiative. "Now, we need to
make sure that all B.C. communities facing CBM development can exercise the
same right. Coalbed methane is a provincial issue, not just a local one."
As a next step, environmental groups are calling on the government to extend a
CBM drilling moratorium province-wide in order to create space for rigorous
risk assessments and community decision-making. This would include the Elk Valley, where British Petroleum was
granted a new CBM tenure, also on Friday.
"Announcing BP's tenure at the same time as the Sacred Headwaters
moratorium was a regrettable move: one step forward, one step back," says
Casey Brennan, Southern Rockies and Flathead Program Manager at Wildsight. "Residents
in the Elk Valley are very concerned that CBM could
cause heavy environmental damage. Without the time and process to resolve their
concerns, we could find ourselves back in conflict."
The B.C. government's announcement also made reference to new wastewater regulations
that would apply to CBM development. Coalbed methane production often removes
large quantities of groundwater, which can contain high concentrations of salts
and heavy metals.
"We fully support the province's commitment to improving wastewater rules,
especially with a time-out on contentious development," says Jaisel
Vadgama, Senior Policy Analyst at the Pembina Institute. "We need both
better regulations and opportunities for communities to decide whether oil and
gas activities are appropriate in their area."
"Two out of three of Friday's announcements showed leadership," adds
Greg Gowe, Staff Lawyer at West Coast Environmental Law. "If we move
forward on a robust legal framework to address key concerns, the stalemate on
CBM could be brought to an end."
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Contact:
Merran Smith - ForestEthics: (604) 816-5636
Eric Swanson - Dogwood Initiative: (250) 858-9990
Casey Brennan - Wildsight: (250) 423-0402
Jaisel Vadgama - The Pembina Institute: (604) 992-0686
Greg Gowe - West Coast Environmental Law: (604) 601 2508
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