The Telegram (St. John's)

Province offers restart for Grieg salmon project review

Company asked to complete more in-depth process, while legal decision pending

- BY ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K afitzpatri­ck@thetelegra­m.com

The Government of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador issued notice Thursday that Grieg NL’S salmon aquacultur­e project will go through an environmen­tal assessment, with the requiremen­t for a detailed environmen­tal impact statement (EIS).

The EIS is a multi-faceted, costly piece of work for any proponent. It is not required for every project.

Grieg NL’S salmon aquacultur­e project in Marystown and Placentia Bay previously did not have to complete one. Without one, the proposed developmen­t was still released by government from further environmen­tal assessment.

However, the decision to release the project was successful­ly challenged in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Supreme Court by the Atlantic Salmon Federation.

The case is still under appeal, but Environmen­t Minister Eddie Joyce said Grieg NL is still interested in the salmon farming developmen­t it has proposed.

Joyce’s latest decision gives the company the option of moving toward its goal of eventually acting on its plans. If it completes the process, including an EIS, the project should be able to proceed.

But the review works comes first.

“We’ve always said we had to strike a balance between the environmen­t and economic benefit on it,” Joyce told reporters outside the House of Assembly, adding the government’s belief had been that the environmen­t could be protected under the process originally pursued, given the regulatory requiremen­ts in place.

Joyce said clarity is still needed for the province on aquacultur­e and so the appeal of the legal case is continuing. The outcome of the case may have implicatio­ns for interpreta­tion of the Environmen­tal Protection Act.

But will Grieg NL pay the costs to begin a new review and complete an EIS in the meantime?

“Grieg is committed to this project. Grieg is very committed to this project,” Joyce said.

The company can also walk away at any point and re-apply with its project plans at a later date.

Grieg NL issued a statement saying it did not see it as necessary, but would begin work on the EIS immediatel­y “as a prudent business step.”

The next step in the review process is a 120-day window wherein the province will settle on specific parameters for the review and the details to be covered in the EIS submission by the company.

“We are very conscious of the importance of our project to the people of the Placentia Bay specifical­ly and to the economy of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador in general,” Grieg has stated.

“We will work with the provincial environmen­tal department and its appointed (review) committee to pursue this process expedientl­y in parallel to the court proceeding­s.”

Public meetings are expected in the coming weeks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada