Thursday, June 25, 2026
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

    Man Accused Of Shooting Kamloops Mountie Injured As Second Officer Fired Back

    Man Accused Of Shooting Kamloops Mountie Injured As Second Officer Fired Back
    British Columbia's police watchdog says a man accused of shooting a Mountie in Kamloops, B.C., sustained a gunshot injury to his arm during an exchange of gunfire with a second officer.

    Man Accused Of Shooting Kamloops Mountie Injured As Second Officer Fired Back

    Young B.C. Football Player Paralyzed From Neck Down By Enterovirus D68

    Young B.C. Football Player Paralyzed From Neck Down By Enterovirus D68
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Within six days, Evan Mutrie went from being a football player for the Kamloops Broncos to being on life support, paralyzed from the neck down after contracting a rare virus.

    Young B.C. Football Player Paralyzed From Neck Down By Enterovirus D68

    RCMP Arrest Suspect In Shooting That Critically Injured B.C. Mountie

    RCMP Arrest Suspect In Shooting That Critically Injured B.C. Mountie
    VICTORIA — A 36-year-old man who is known to police has been arrested by members of an emergency-response team in Kamloops, B.C., just hours after an RCMP officer was shot and critically wounded.

    RCMP Arrest Suspect In Shooting That Critically Injured B.C. Mountie

    Tests Confirm Avian Influenza Strain At B.C. Farms As H5N2

    Tests Confirm Avian Influenza Strain At B.C. Farms As H5N2
    VANCOUVER — The type of avian influenza responsible for an outbreak at poultry farms in southwestern British Columbia is H5N2, a source has confirmed — the same virus behind at least three other previous outbreaks at Canadian farms.

    Tests Confirm Avian Influenza Strain At B.C. Farms As H5N2

    Kinder Morgan President Says Policing Costs Are Not Company's Responsibility

    Kinder Morgan President Says Policing Costs Are Not Company's Responsibility
    BURNABY, B.C. — The president of Kinder Morgan says his company isn't responsible for the policing bill related to pipeline protests at a Metro Vancouver conservation site.

    Kinder Morgan President Says Policing Costs Are Not Company's Responsibility

    Class-action Against Government 'Biggest Battle' Of His Life: Disabled War Vet

    Class-action Against Government 'Biggest Battle' Of His Life: Disabled War Vet
    VANCOUVER — Major Mark Campbell was lying in a hospital bed, just starting to comprehend losing both his legs above the knees in a Taliban ambush, when he found out the federal government had stripped his lifetime military pension.

    Class-action Against Government 'Biggest Battle' Of His Life: Disabled War Vet