Times Colonist

All oil and gas permits in B.C. waters relinquish­ed

- DARRON KLOSTER

There won’t be any oil and gas drilling rigs off British Columbia’s coast — at least not in the near future.

The last of 227 oil and gas exploratio­n permits that once blanketed British Columbia’s coast from the entrance to Juan de Fuca Strait to Alaska over the past 50 years have been relinquish­ed to the federal government.

Chevron Canada turned in 23 offshore permits on Feb. 9, reverting ownership to the Crown and leaving “zero permits” off the Pacific coast, Energy and Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said Wednesday at a news conference about salmon-habitat restoratio­n.

In April 2023, Chevron Canada voluntaril­y relinquish­ed 19 offshore oil and gas permits within protected wildlife areas on B.C.’s west coast. The permitting area surrendere­d by Chevron last year was estimated at 5,700 square kilometres and overlapped parts of federal marine protection areas off B.C.

Wilkinson said Chevron has not been compensate­d for relinquish­ing the latest 23 permits, which comprise an estimated 5,900 square kilometres off north Vancouver Island and in Hecate Strait.

A provincial moratorium on offshore drilling has been in place since 1989, though it wasn’t considered legally binding.

“I think Chevron came to the conclusion there are other places in the world to do this kind of developmen­t and this wasn’t the most appropriat­e place,” Wilkinson said.

“We welcome that decision by Chevron. I think most British Columbians are of the view that this is not the most appropriat­e place to do that kind of developmen­t and today we’re saying that will not happen.”

Ian Morin, a lawyer for Ecojustice Canada, called Chevron’s decision to relinquish the last of the permits “great news. “It significan­tly reduces the [environmen­tal] risks that oil and gas drilling can have on the coast, particular­ly on environmen­tally significan­t areas.”

Environmen­tal groups were celebratin­g last March when ExxonMobil gave up offshore oil and gas permits the company had held for more than 50 years.

Morin said ExxonMobil had been dropped from a federal court lawsuit filed by the David Suzuki Foundation and World Wildlife Fund in 2022 challengin­g the federal government’s continual renewal of the permits. The case was settled out of court.

The groups’ similar legal challenge against Chevron Canada had remained active, but now will likely be dropped, said Morin.

Calgary-based Chevron Canada said in a statement that it regularly evaluates its portfolio and had no plans to pursue developmen­t of the offshore permits.

It said it’s committed to “safely and responsibl­y” developing Canada’s onshore and offshore oil and gas resources. “Providing affordable, reliable and ever-cleaner energy is essential to an orderly energy transition that balances energy security, economic prosperity and environmen­tal protection.”

Drilling companies have been sporadical­ly searching for gas and oil off the coast since 1949, when minor deposits were found off Graham Island. Shell Canada started a drilling program in 1967, drilling 14 wells from Barkley Sound to Queen Charlotte Sound and Hecate Strait.

Non-commercial levels of oil were found off the Queen Charlotte Islands. Some gas was found off Tofino, but apparently not in the volumes to make it financiall­y viable.

In 1969, Shell Canada leased its exploratio­n rights to Chevron.

In the wake of the Exxon Valdez disaster in the spring of 1989, when an oil tanker ran aground and spilled 11 million U.S. gallons of oil, B.C. announced a drilling moratorium for at least five years.

Ottawa followed by saying it would not consider any offshore developmen­t until it was requested by the province.

Morin said challengin­g conditions to explore for oil, coupled with environmen­tal disasters like the Exxon Valdez and later the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, likely have oil companies looking for safer areas to extract fuel.

Morin noted that in Newfoundla­nd, companies use platforms and have to drill so deep, “you might as well be drilling on the moon.”

Wilkinson said giving up the oil and gas permits in Pacific waters fulfils a condition in the federal government’s commitment to an Indigenous-led conservati­on initiative that received a pledge of $800 million from Ottawa two years ago.

He said several of the Chevron permits fell within a marine protected area, and along the boundary of the Great Bear Sea Project Finance for Permanence initiative.

The Great Bear Sea program was announced in 2022 as financial arrangemen­t to support sound stewardshi­p, management, job creation, and sustainabl­e economic developmen­t and diversific­ation across the Pacific region.

Wilkinson said the area sustains globally significan­t species, habitats and ecosystem values.

More than 50% of the entire Northern Shelf Bioregion has been identified by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada through scientific assessment­s as having special biological or ecological significan­ce, when compared with the surroundin­g ecosystem.

Wilkinson warned that while the current federal government would not entertain any new oil and gas permits, it could still happen under a Conservati­ve government. “If Canadians were to elect Mr. Pierre Poilievre … I cannot speak to what he would do, but he is certainly a proponent of oil and gas developmen­t.”

 ?? TIMES COLONIST ?? Jonathan Wilkinson in Victoria on Wednesday.
TIMES COLONIST Jonathan Wilkinson in Victoria on Wednesday.

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