As I posted previously, the biggest take-away message for Canada and BC from the BP oilspill in the Gulf of Mexico is that oil and gas development at sea is so inherently risky that even strong environmental laws regulating the activity cannot remove the risks of a catastrophic oil spill. In an isolated, pristine ecosystem the best environmental law would be a ban on any drilling or transportation of oil.
But drilling down into the situation in the Gulf (pardon the tasteless pun) reveals other environmental law lessons for Canada. In this post we’ll discuss what the oil spill tells us about the problems of government discretion not to do environmental assessments.
Discretion in Environmental Assessments
It has been revealed that the Deepwater Horizon rig had not been required to undergo a detailed environmental assessment (or Environmental Impact Assessment) because, in the view of staff with the Department of the Interior,
… "a large oil spill" from a platform would not exceed a total of 1,500 barrels and that a "deepwater spill," occurring "offshore of the inner Continental shelf," would not reach the coast.
Oops. I guess the moral of the story is that it’s a mistake for government to decide that it already knows the environmental consequences of a project without conducting an environmental assessment.
Seems like an obvious lesson, but the fact is that Canada’s federal and provincial governments are coming up with more and more ways to avoid doing detailed environmental assessments.
If the actions of the US Department of the Interior reveal anything it’s that allowing government to arbitrarily choose which projects get a detailed environmental assessment, and which do not, does not protect the environment, or the communities that depend upon it.
Legal Planet is drawing further lessons about the quality of the environmental assessment process, and how to ensure that such assessments are not arbitrary and have a high level of transparency and accountability. Here’s what they suggest:
These suggestions could all be adapted to a Canadian context.
The lessons of the Gulf provide yet another reason to oppose the Canadian Government’s plans to gut the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act. West Coast Environmental Law has been on the forefront of opposing these amendments. But they also point to ways in which Canadian environmental assessment legislation, at both the federal and provincial levels, could be strengthened.
Related Post: Protest Against Gutting CEAA turns to Facebook
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