Friday, February 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

First Nations angry: NAFTA environmental body won't probe Canadian salmon farms

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2014 02:15 PM

    MONTREAL — Conservationists and First Nations are angry that NAFTA's environmental watchdog has rejected a recommendation to investigate Canada's handling of salmon farms along the British Columbia coast.

    "I am deeply disappointed in Canada continuing to put wild salmon at risk,” said Chief Bob Chamberlin of the Kwikwasutinuxw Haxwa'mis First Nation. “This process may have ended, but our struggle to safeguard wild salmon will not falter for a moment.”

    The Commission on Environmental Co-operation said Friday that its three-member council had voted against looking into accusations that Canada violated its own laws by allowing fish farms to harm wild salmon stocks through the spread of parasites.

    Canada and Mexico voted against the investigation, while the United States wanted to pursue it.

    Canada argued that there is already a lawsuit before the courts in B.C. The commission's rules don't allow investigations into matters that are already the subject of legal proceedings.

    The commission's staff had already concluded there was enough evidence against Canada to merit a deeper examination. They argued that the B.C. lawsuit is substantially different than what they were looking into.

    But Canada said staff had no right to consider for themselves whether the legal issues were the same. They should only take direction from a member country, it argued.

    The vote, which was taken five months after it was supposed to have been, ends the joint complaint from the First Nation, the Center for Biological Diversity, the Pacific Coast Wild Salmon Society and the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations.

    Canada is facing another vote on an investigation into its environmental practices. Environmental groups and individuals say Canada is breaking the Fisheries Act by allowing an unknown amount of tailings from the oilsands to seep into groundwater.

    The deadline for that vote was supposed to have been Oct. 27.

    The commission was created in 1995 to win environmental support for the North American Free Trade Agreement by ensuring the deal wouldn't boost commerce at the expense of clean air, water or land. Commission staff investigate public complaints that Canada, the U.S. or Mexico aren't living up to their laws and they can recommend an investigation called a "factual record" if they find enough grounds.

    The investigation only proceeds if a majority of member nations approve it.

    The commission has little or no enforcement power even if it does conclude a nation isn't living up to its environmental laws.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study

    Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study
    OTTAWA — Canadian investments in clean energy totalled $6.5 billion last year, a 45 per cent increase from 2012, according to a new study released Tuesday.

    Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study

    Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law

    Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law
    OTTAWA — Thwarted in his efforts to force the House of Commons to debate the issue of assisted suicide, Manitoba Conservative MP Stephen Fletcher has gone down the hall for some help.

    Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law

    Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt

    Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt
    OTTAWA — Terminal cancer patients, organ-transplant recipients and suicidal, debt-addled Canadians are among the 11,000 people waiting to have their appeals heard by Ottawa's badly backlogged social security tribunal.

    Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt

    NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio

    NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio
    OTTAWA — Julian Fantino was greeted Monday in the House of Commons by opposition demands that he step down — but how much of a political liability the veterans affairs minister may be for the Conservative government remains to be seen.

    NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio

    Report of abduction of Israeli-Canadian soldier may be false: government source

    Report of abduction of Israeli-Canadian soldier may be false: government source
    OTTAWA — The federal government is now working on the assumption that the reported abduction of an Israeli-Canadian woman by Islamic militants may in fact be false, The Canadian Press has learned.  

    Report of abduction of Israeli-Canadian soldier may be false: government source

    Ontario Man Arrested In 1970s Murders Of Two B.C. Girls

    Ontario Man Arrested In 1970s Murders Of Two B.C. Girls
    VANCOUVER — Shari Greer made a promise to her 11-year-old daughter as she grieved over the girl's grave site that she would never give up the hunt for the killer.

    Ontario Man Arrested In 1970s Murders Of Two B.C. Girls