The Prince George Citizen

Site C dam putting park in danger, First Nations, environmen­tal groups say

- Bob WEBER

EDMONTON — First Nations and environmen­tal groups want the federal government to revisit its approval of British Columbia’s Site C dam which they worry would threaten a national park that is a World Heritage Site.

Groups including the Mikisew Cree and the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society say the risk to Alberta’s Wood Buffalo National Park from the dam and upstream oilsands developmen­t is so dire that they will ask UNESCO investigat­ors to put the area on its list of threatened sites.

“Government­s have continued to allow threat after threat,” Mikisew Chief Steve Courtoreil­le said Monday. “The results of the impacts are really destroying our way of life.”

Two UNESCO investigat­ors have been in Alberta for the last week visiting the national park and talking to government, industry, aboriginal and scientific presenters. The investigat­ors were invited to Canada by the federal government after the Mikisew contacted the agency in December and expressed concerns about the park, which has been a World Heritage site since 1983.

The park, Canada’s largest at 45,000 square kilometres, is considered of global importance because of the size of its undisturbe­d wetlands and tracts of boreal forest.

Its wildlife includes the world’s only breeding whooping cranes and millions of other migratory birds.

However, concerns have been growing.

Scientists say the area’s river delta, one of the largest in the world, is drying out since the constructi­on of the WAC Bennett Dam in 1968. Some fear Site C – a proposed hydro dam in the Peace River region – would make that worse, a concern that was not examined in B.C.’s environmen­tal assessment.

The park is also downstream of the oilsands.

“We know now that those systems are leaking small amounts of contaminan­ts and air-borne emissions are adding small amounts,” said David Schindler, an ecologist who made a presentati­on to the UNESCO team last week.

Although the impact of those chemicals is debated, mercury has been found in bird eggs and some fish are under a consumptio­n advisory.

Terry Abel of the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, who also spoke to the investigat­ors, said environmen­tal monitoring has greatly increased in recent years.

“People are paying attention to that monitoring informatio­n,” he said.

“What we’re seeing at this point, there’s certainly not any adverse effects from the oilsands on Wood Buffalo National Park.”

Investigat­ors are expected to deliver their report to UNESCO in late November.

The agency is to decide next summer whether to list the park as threatened.

The decision to send the two-person team specifical­ly cites dams, oilsands developmen­t and proposed open-pit mining. It also notes a lack of engagement with First Nations.

George Green of Parks Canada, who accompanie­d the investigat­ors, said that whether or not Wood Buffalo is listed as threatened, some recommenda­tions for Canada are likely to come.

“It’s not binding, but we take this very seriously,” he said.

Some 55 of UNESCO’s 1,052 World Heritage Sites are on the threatened list.

Two sites have been officially delisted in the program’s history.

Investigat­ions are regular parts of UNESCO’s work, said University of Montreal professor Christina Cameron, who has both studied and participat­ed in the World Heritage Site process.

“It goes on all the time,” said Cameron, who estimated there are anywhere between 150 and 200 such reports a year. “It’s a wake-up call.” If problems are found, UNESCO tries to work with the local government to try to restore the site, she said. The agency has no enforcemen­t power.

Courtoreil­le said Wood Buffalo is already so dry that his people can no longer trap or fish for a living. Streams and small rivers are impassable, closing large parts of Mikisew’s traditiona­l territory to traditiona­l practices. “We just don’t go,” he said. “We can’t go.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Steve Courtoreil­le, Chief of the Mikisew Cree First Nation walks off Parliament Hill after speaking about legal action against the federal government in Ottawa on Jan. 8, 2013.
CP FILE PHOTO Steve Courtoreil­le, Chief of the Mikisew Cree First Nation walks off Parliament Hill after speaking about legal action against the federal government in Ottawa on Jan. 8, 2013.

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