Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Ross Huntley's avatar

The one advantage that Alberta has is a decade of experience with the oil and gas industry. Provincially, approvals for projects are pretty much predetermined. The province knows the methods the oil and gas industry uses and industry can plan based on expected outcomes. I contrast this with federal approaches which are poorly structured and often based on environmental studies and conditional approvals.

The "drop in and we will talk" approach reeks of risk for corporations.

Regardless of the type of mine, from a regulatory perspective they are very much the same. The corporation controls the surface for a period of time, should be required to remediate it to an industry standard, and limit the environmental effects to that area. Compensation and approvals should be formulaic, not negotiated. This requires the province, the RM, and all surface rights holders including FMAs, and First Nations to have thought out ahead of time what is required of a generic mine, pipeline, well, etc.

The first step in any resource development project is assessment of risk. Uncertain regulatory conditions put a high risk premium on it.

Expand full comment
NotoriousSceptic's avatar

Kindly not add to the size of the coefficient of Canadian collective stupidity by words "The abduction of Nicholas Maduro ".

Replace with far more factual "long overdue arrest of dictator Nicholas Maduro running a murderous narco-regime while supplying passports of convenience to a plethora of terrorist groups."

Expand full comment
20 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?