Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Must Work On Determining Total Impact Of Resource Projects: Auditor General

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 May, 2015 10:32 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general says the province has failed to adequately address the long-term environmental impact of its resource-development decisions.
     
    Carol Bellringer issued a report Tuesday, saying that building roads, logging forests and exploring gas fields come with environmental, social and cultural consequences, but the government is not doing enough to consider them.
     
    Her report, Managing the Cumulative Effects of Natural Resource Development in B.C., makes nine recommendations, including giving the Forests, Lands and Resource Operations Ministry authority to manage a program that oversees the potential effects of resource projects.
     
    "Decisions regarding natural-resource development are being made without fully understanding the implications for the environment and the well-being of British Columbians," Bellringer told a news conference.
     
    "The ministry is working to support cumulative affects management, but more needs to be done."
     
    She said she's aware the government is planning a phased-in process that considers the wide-ranging impacts of resource-project decisions, but it will not be complete until 2021, and comes with no firm guidelines.
     
    The report focused on B.C.'s northwest, but said that as of last year there were up to 160 resource projects potentially worth billions of dollars, but their environmental and social effects are not being properly considered.
     
    Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations Minister Steve Thomson said in a statement that the government is committed to sustainable development and has been working on a cumulative effects policy for the past 18 months.
     
    "We are confident that government's cumulative effects framework supports our commitment to environmentally sound and sustainable natural resource development," he said.
     
    Opposition NDP environment critic Spencer Chandra Herbert said the report concludes the government does not take long-term environmental impacts seriously in its project decisions.
     
    "The idea that you have to consider the whole of the ecosystem is probably as old as environmentalism itself," he said. "When you don't pay attention you get what's happening in the northwest and the southeast of the province where the caribou is at risk of extinction because of so many other pressures."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Terror Suspect Anxious Waiting For News Of Explosions In Victoria

    B.C. Terror Suspect Anxious Waiting For News Of Explosions In Victoria
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. man accused of plotting to attack the provincial legislature on Canada Day appears anxious in an undercover video as he awaits news that his bombs have exploded.

    B.C. Terror Suspect Anxious Waiting For News Of Explosions In Victoria

    Canadian Man, 50, Found Beaten To Death On Beach At Mexican Resort Of Los Cabos

    Canadian Man, 50, Found Beaten To Death On Beach At Mexican Resort Of Los Cabos
    MEXICO CITY — A Canadian man has been found beaten to death on a beach at the Mexican resort of Los Cabos.

    Canadian Man, 50, Found Beaten To Death On Beach At Mexican Resort Of Los Cabos

    Immigration Hurting Sovereignty Movement: Liberals Slam Peladeau For Comments

    Immigration Hurting Sovereignty Movement: Liberals Slam Peladeau For Comments
    On Wednesday, Peladeau said during a PQ leadership debate that immigration was hurting the sovereignty movement.

    Immigration Hurting Sovereignty Movement: Liberals Slam Peladeau For Comments

    Adil Charkaoui's Community School Resumes As Junior College Lifts Suspension

    Adil Charkaoui's Community School Resumes As Junior College Lifts Suspension
    MONTREAL — A man once accused by Ottawa of being a terrorist says he'll be able to resume using class space at a Montreal junior college to operate his community school.

    Adil Charkaoui's Community School Resumes As Junior College Lifts Suspension

    Toronto Hospital Says Recent Traveller To West Africa Doesn't Have Ebola

    Toronto Hospital Says Recent Traveller To West Africa Doesn't Have Ebola
    TORONTO — A person who recently travelled in West Africa has tested negative for Ebola after being assessed in a Toronto hospital.

    Toronto Hospital Says Recent Traveller To West Africa Doesn't Have Ebola

    CRTC To Require Cable, Satellite Companies To Offer Basic Package, With $25 Cap

    CRTC To Require Cable, Satellite Companies To Offer Basic Package, With $25 Cap
    GATINEAU, Que. — The country's broadcast regulator is coming out with new rules today that will require cable and satellite companies to offer customers a trimmed-down, basic channels package, sources have told The Canadian Press.

    CRTC To Require Cable, Satellite Companies To Offer Basic Package, With $25 Cap