NewsroomFor Immediate ReleaseSuffield Files Reveal Disturbing Story of Environmental Degradation, Non-compliance by Energy Companies and Industry Giant EnCanaMarch 1, 2007 (Ottawa) - Internal government documents regarding energy company EnCana’s activities inside Canadian Forces Base Suffield, including a federally protected National Wildlife Area (NWA), reveal a The internal documents, many obtained through the Access to Information Act, show “significant shortcomings” in the energy industry’s environmental record, including that of industry giant EnCana, which is seeking to expand its activities in the NWA. The Suffield NWA is a 458 km2 protected area located inside the 2,690 km2 Canadian Forces Base near Medicine Hat, Alberta. "Prime Minister Stephen Harper has told Canadians they deserve large tracts of unspoiled wilderness that will preserve our precious flora and fauna. We would like him to start with protecting the NWA,” says Cliff Wallis, Alberta Wilderness Association Past-President. The Suffield NWA is an internationally significant grassland encompassing fragile sand dunes and sand plains. It provides secure habitat for more than 1,100 native prairie species, including 13 federal Species at Risk and 78 provincially listed “at risk” species.
The documents revealed that an audit of a so-called “minimal disturbance” shallow gas infill drilling program in Koomati, an area of the Suffield military base on the east side of the South Saskatchewan River, found significant impacts on native grassland, including: multiple access routes to wells, significant disturbance at lease sites, disregard for species at risk, improper waste management and lack of promised monitoring. The Spring 2005 audit, which included work by a qualified biologist from the Base, concluded that Koomati has suffered significant environmental impact from the winter drilling of 104 shallow gas wells. The documents acknowledge that A 2005 environmental incident report sent by the Base to industry operating in CFB Suffield spoke of “significant shortcomings” that “run counter to industry guidelines and standard practices” and had a strong rebuke of the industry for the shortcomings. "EnCana is asking that Canadians trust that it has the environment’s interests at heart, but the record shows this is not the case. Instead, it appears that EnCana is treating endangered species and their habitat as an obstacle,” says Dawn Dickinson of the Grasslands Naturalists.
EnCana is seeking a permit from the federal government to drill 1,275 shallow gas wells and construct over 220 km of pipelines inside Suffield NWA. The proposed project is slated to go to a panel review later this year and the company is currently working on an Environmental Impact
However, the documents show that EnCana resisted the environmental assessment process. EnCana did not want their project to go to a panel review and it pressured Ottawa to streamline the approval process so drilling could occur before the end of 2005 without completing a proper
"Does Canada really want to set the dangerous precedent of granting a permit for development inside a federally protected area, and risk rendering the very concept of ‘protected area’ meaningless, particularly when there seems to be little assurance that such development will be The documents also showed:
"These revelations are a damning indictment of energy industry activity in an area of international environmental significance,” says Sandra Foss, President, Federation of Alberta Naturalists. “This reinforces our call to halt all industrial activity in the most sensitive land—the Suffield National
Coalition members include: Alberta Wilderness Association, Federation of Alberta Naturalists, Grassland Naturalists, Nature Canada, Southern Alberta Group for the Environment, and World Wildlife Fund. For more information, contact:
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