June 1, 2012
Two Cheers for the Defenders of Rural Montana
Wild Lands Advocate Article 20(3): June 2012 20120600_ar_wla_update_oilsands_megaloads_urquhart.pdf
Our future is threatened because the Government of Alberta and the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) are failing to regulate the fossil fuel industry responsibly.
That’s why C4RE (The Coalition for Responsible Energy) was created. Formed by 12 signatories, and the help of other supporters, C4RE wants to fix how energy is managed in Alberta. And we need your help to do it.
Our communities and our livelihoods depend on a healthy landscape. The energy decisions we make today will have long-lasting impacts on the generations to come. Too often, energy decisions are made that benefit corporations in the fossil fuel industry at the expense of taxpayers, impacted communities, Indigenous Peoples, and the environment.
Responsible energy means putting Alberta’s ecosystems first, along with the health, safety, and rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities, while protecting taxpayers.
Fossil fuel companies and their shareholders cannot be prioritized over our wellbeing. We can’t fix energy regulation alone, but change is possible if we work together.
Both the Alberta government and the Alberta Energy Regulator are captured by the fossil fuel industry. By this, we mean that industry interests have become a priority in the government and regulators decision making, rather than the interests of Albertans and the environment.
Below are real life examples in the news this past year that demonstrate how the Alberta government and the AER are captured.
February 2023
An Imperial Oil tailings pond has been leaking for nine months – https://thenarwhal.ca/imperial-oil-kearl-aer/
September 2023
‘They’re ramming it down our throats,’ Cold Lake First Nation Chief says of Pathways carbon capture project – https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/they-re-ramming-it-down-our-throats-cold-lake-first-nation-chief-says-of-pathways-carbon-capture-project-1.6964936
October 2023
Alberta’s continued reluctance to collect adequate funds for the cleanup of both conventional oil and gas, and oilsands liabilities—estimated to be as high as $260 billion—leaving taxpayers at risk for the cleanup tab – https://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/EFL-49A-AB-ConvenOGLiabilityRegime.YewchukFluker.pdf
October 2023
The AER wrongly accepting Northback’s applications for coal-related work at Grassy Mountain – including an exploration program, water diversion licenses, and a deep drilling permit – despite the previous joint review panel decision. – https://ablawg.ca/2023/10/13/the-aer-does-not-have-the-jurisdiction-to-consider-new-coal-applications-for-the-grassy-mountain-coal-deposit/
October 2023
When Is a Killed Alberta Coal Mine Really Dead? Never, according to the regulator’s stance on Grassy Mountain. That’s ‘preposterous and illegal,’ states a legal expert. – https://www.thetyee.ca/Analysis/2023/10/10/Killed-Alberta-Coal-Mine/
December 2023
Not Fit for Purpose: Oil Sands Mines and Alberta’s Mine Financial Security Program — https://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/EFL-49B-NotFitforPurpose.Olszynski-et-al.pdf
November 2023
The AER’s decision not to reconsider its approval of Suncor’s operational plan for the McClelland Lake Wetland Complex despite evidence of its flaws. – https://calgaryherald.com/business/energy/aer-wont-reconsider-approval-suncor-expansion-wetland
Alberta NDP decries contract for government supporter to review energy regulator, It’s the second recent sole-source for David Yager (a longtime oilpatch executive), who also worked on a report on Alberta’s energy future — a report that has never been released – https://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/ndp-decries-contract-ucp-supporter-energy-regulator
December 2023
Mounting evidence seems to show the AER operates without sufficient public transparency and has vast discretionary powers. Rather than serving the best interests of Indigenous communities, the environment, and the public at large, the agency seems to be held captive by industry interests. – https://albertawilderness.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Advocate-Winter-2023-AER-reform.pdf
January 2024
New research showing that the oil sands industry is under-reporting harmful emissions by up to 6300 percent. – https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/jan/25/canadian-tar-sands-pollution-is-up-to-6300-higher-than-reported-study-finds
February 2024
The $250 million in unpaid property taxes owed to rural municipalities from oil and gas companies. – https://calgaryherald.com/business/energy/alberta-energy-companies-owe-municipalities-taxes
March 2024
The AER’s abysmal response to the leak and spill of tailings at Imperial’s Kearl Mine by withholding information from impacted Indigenous communities for nine months. – https://www.aptnnews.ca/featured/everything-is-going-downhill-athabasca-fort-chipewyan-files-lawsuit-against-alberta-regulator-over-kearl-spill/
According to information obtained from the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER), from 2010 to 2023, Alberta collected just 71 cents from oilsands operators to put toward cleaning up the vast toxic tailings spread across the landscape and to remediate mine sites. – https://edmontonjournal.com/opinion/columnists/opinion-if-alberta-is-serious-about-energy-project-cleanup-lets-start-with-the-oilsands
April 2024
The AER adding four new members to its Board of Directors all from the oil and gas industry – alongside the Premier’s Special Adviser, David Yager – https://calgaryherald.com/opinion/columnists/varcoe-aer-appoint-new-chair-stormy-times-regulator
May 2024
No guarantee from the AER that the $16.5-billion Pathways Alliance carbon capture and storage (CCUS) project will undergo an environmental impact assessment – despite including over 600 km of pipelines & carbon storage area of 18,000 km2. – https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/pathways-alliance-environmental-impact-assessment-1.7205052
June 2024
Alberta government reducing independence of province’s energy regulator: Opposition – https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-alberta-government-reducing-independence-of-provinces-energy-regulator/
Inside Danielle Smith’s Plan to ‘De-Risk’ Fossil Fuel Investments Curiously, it involves skimming from the Alberta Heritage Fund. – https://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2024/06/20/Danielle-Smith-UCP-De-Risk-Fossil-Fuel-Investment-Heritage-Fund/
July 2024
The AER offloading its responsibility for insolvency applications to the industry-controlled Orphan Well Association (OWA) – minimizing costs to industry while increasing the risk to Albertans. – https://calgaryherald.com/opinion/columnists/opinion-albertas-energy-regulator-prioritizes-industry-profits-over-taxpayers
The Government of Alberta’s plan to allow companies to buy abandoned oil and gas assets without paying off the unpaid municipal tax debt owed by the previous owner. – https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/oilpatch-unpaid-taxes-1.7263639
August 2024
Alberta’s Court of Appeal ruled this week that the Alberta Energy Regulator’s decision… is highly questionable and possibly an error in law – https://thetyee.ca/Analysis/2024/08/29/Alberta-Highest-Court-Jams-Smith-Coal-Plans/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=weekend_read
The AER only charging Imperial $50K for violating approval conditions related to the leak/spill of tailings at its Kearl mine. Despite Imperial earning $1.13 Billion in Q2 of 2024 alone. – https://www.aptnnews.ca/national-news/regulator-issues-penalty-conditions-on-imperial-oil-amid-ongoing-kearl-investigation/
The AER’s irrational plan for inactive, decommissioned, and orphan wells is based on flawed predictions that expect the conventional O&G industry to be flush with cash in the late 2030s & will end with the AER enforcing regulatory obligations after industry is no longer able to pay – violating the polluter pays principle. – https://ablawg.ca/2024/08/16/the-alberta-energy-regulators-planned-timelines-for-orphan-inactive-and-decommissioned-oil-and-gas-infrastructure/
September 2024
The AER’s $50K fine for imperial was 96% lower than it could/should have been – “the legislation and regulations involved allow for an administrative penalty that could have exceeded $1,315,000.” – https://ablawg.ca/2024/09/04/administrative-penalties-at-the-alberta-energy-regulator-regulatory-penalties-for-the-kearl-oilsands-leak/
Energy minister says public money could help finance Alberta energy cleanup https://calgaryherald.com/business/energy/energy-minister-says-public-money-could-help-finance-alberta-energy-cleanup
The Alberta government has officially handed back more than $137 million to the federal government after running out of time to spend the cash to clean up old oil and natural gas wells. – https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/alberta-orphan-wells-inactive-decommision-1.7324701#:~:text=The%20Alberta%20government%20has%20officially,oil%20and%20natural%20gas%20wells.
Will Danielle Smith Use Albertans’ Pensions to Bail Out Big Oil? The UCP government appears to be ready to let energy companies avoid cleanup costs. – https://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2024/09/18/Will-Danielle-Smith-Albertans-Pensions-Big-Oil/
June 1, 2012
Wild Lands Advocate Article 20(3): June 2012 20120600_ar_wla_update_oilsands_megaloads_urquhart.pdf
April 19, 2012
March 1, 2012
20120300_ar_oilsands_wetland_destruction_carbonloss_rooney_bayley_schindler.pdf
February 22, 2012
February 3, 2012
Today, forty five years after the first tar sands mines started, the federal government has…
January 1, 2012
Report by Global Forest Watch Canada. Finds that for the eight boreal woodland caribou populations…
November 1, 2011
Wild Lands Advocate Article 19(5): October 2011 by Carolyn Campbell 20111000_ar_awa_oilsands_monitoring_ccampbell.pdf
August 29, 2011
The Alberta government’s updated Draft Lower Athabasca Regional Plan confirms irresponsible tar sands development by…
August 26, 2011
A long overdue federal woodland caribou recovery strategy released today allows ongoing habitat loss at…
August 1, 2011
Wild Lands Advocate Article 19(4): August 2011 by Carolyn Campbell 20110800_ar_wla_larp_ccampbell.pdf