“The biggest learning from this is that the province has oversight and control over what information the federal government is receiving,” said Mandy Olsgard, a toxicologist who has worked on regulatory issues for the Alberta Energy Regulator and Indigenous groups.“They just hand it off to the province.”
“It’s a general message of don’t rock the boat,” he said. “It permeates the department of energy and it permeates Alberta Environment.” “We need to take a step back and say ‘What are the processes? Were they followed? And do we need to enhance them?”‘ Savage said this week. “We’re committed to taking the step to enhancing all of those processes.”Article contentBut Marlin Schmidt, the Alberta New Democrat’s environment critic, is skeptical.
The Kearl situation shows it can be a mistake for the federal government to “harmonize” regulations with the provinces and delegate oversight to them, Olszynski said.Article content
Oilsands are natural. They've existed as long as the earth. 🙄
CalgaryHerald: We all know that there's absolutely no way the petroleum industry is ever going to face any consequences from our UCP provincial government. Your neglect to mention the UCP's move to criminalize federal water inspection seems purposeful..
Not acceptable
You got that right. You could never do this in Alberta:
Simple solution, at least for reporting: Anyone responsible for a spill should be required to report the spill/leak on a publicly accessible portal within 24 hours. No report? Also simple, $1 million penalty/day late.
Not a good look, government 'war room' accusing others of coordinated smear campaigns against oil industry, then promptly engages in reputational self harm.
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