June 6, 2012
3,500 000 Litre Pipeline Spill into NW Alberta Peatlands
On May 19, 2012 a pipeline leak occurred in north west Alberta, approximately 20 kilometres…
AWA believes that energy exploration and development must be regulated in a manner that is consistent with the maintenance of wilderness values.
AWA’s mandate throughout its four decades has been the protection of intact, representative ecosystems across Alberta. In areas where economic development is integrated within a working landscape, AWA supports robust management, regulation, and enforcement strategies.
We believe in a fundamental need for wilderness that is free of industrial incursion; a network of legislated protected areas is currently the only framework under which this can be ensured. Outside of such areas, exploration and development must be conducted in an environmentally responsible manner. Full-field life-cycle planning must be required for all new developments including phase-out, remediation, and reclamation. Adequate reclamation liability must be assessed on a per-project basis that accounts for all remediation and reclamation costs, and does not leave Albertans vulnerable to major financial risks.
AWA believes Alberta’s wilderness and natural capital are non-renewable resources of immeasurable value, and must be considered as such and given priority in land-use planning. An overarching land-use plan is desperately needed in Alberta to set targets for all sectors, determine thresholds and establish priorities for land use throughout the province. Conservation areas must be designated with legal protection.
When considering land disturbance impacts, the cumulative footprint of all past, present and planned developments upon the landscape must be considered. Energy development does not take place in isolation: it occurs on a landscape also impacted by forestry, residential and recreational developments. The combined footprint of all of these activities must be considered in planning decisions.
Collectively, we know that the economic value of the ecosystem services performed by natural ecosystems for humankind far exceeds that of industrial development.
June 6, 2012
On May 19, 2012 a pipeline leak occurred in north west Alberta, approximately 20 kilometres…
June 5, 2012
Kananaskis Country has won a reprieve from a proposed sour gas development. The long-running saga…
June 1, 2012
Wild Lands Advocate Article 20(3): June 2012 20120600_ar_wla_update_oilsands_megaloads_urquhart.pdf
April 19, 2012
March 7, 2012
Construction of Suncor Energy’s ill-fated Sullivan sour gas development in Kananaskis Country seems unlikely to…
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…
December 2, 2011
In a highly significant decision, the Alberta Utilities Commission (AUC) yesterday refused permission to Altalink…
December 2, 2011
Peter Kent, the Minister of Environment, responds to concerns brought forth by AWA regarding the…