Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

UNESCO Issues Warning About Wood Buffalo National Park Due To Dams, Development

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2017 11:38 PM
    An United Nations agency has issued a warning about the environmental health of Canada's largest national park.
     
    In a report released Friday, UNESCO says northern Alberta's Wood Buffalo National Park is threatened by energy development, hydro dams and poor management. It warns that unless the area is better cared for, the park will be added to the list of World Heritage Sites in Danger.
     
    The report acknowledges that the overall condition of the vast park — bigger than the Netherlands — remains good. But it concludes there's no guarantee that will continue.
     
    "There is long-standing, conceivable and consistent evidence of severe environmental and human health concerns based on both western science and local and indigenous knowledge," the report says.
     
    "The concerns coincide with the absence of effective and independent mechanisms to analyze and address these concerns at an adequate scale."
     
    Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna welcomed the report.
     
    "The findings and recommendations contained in this report represent a call to action," she said in a release. "A true response to this report will only be possible through collaboration."
     
    UNESCO inspectors visited the park in September and October. They came at the urging of First Nations, who have long expressed concern about the cumulative effects on the Peace-Athabasca Delta of hydro projects in British Columbia, oilsands development in Alberta and climate change, which is already changing the landscape.
     
    "The key issue is the declining water level," said Melody Lepine of the Mikisew Cree First Nation. 
     
    "There's mud flats everywhere and we just can't get out on the land. When you can't navigate on our river systems through our delta, it's preventing us from exercising our rights and passing on our culture."
     
    Concerns about water levels go back to the construction of B.C. Hydro's Bennett Dam, built in the 1960s without environmental assessment.
     
    No study has ever been conducted on how much water the delta needs to sustain ecological functions, even as industrial demands increase. Shifting precipitation patterns from climate change are already lowering summer water levels. 
     
    B.C. Hydro says the UNESCO report "chose to disregard evidence" that found its Site C project "will have no measurable effect on the Peace-Athabasca Delta."
     
    It says the report recommends an environmental and social impact assesment for the hydroelectric dam and generating station, but says those have already been done.
     
    The park is also being affected by upstream energy development, the report says.
     
    UNESCO says evidence suggests the oilsands are depositing contaminants in the air, water and land. It says toxins such as mercury are showing up in the food web via bird eggs and fish.
     
    "Governments and industry seem to be unwilling to adequately monitor or accept these claims."
     
    The report points out one new proposed oilsands mine is near the southern border of the park.
     
    The Alberta government, which is responsible for environmental monitoring in the area and regulation of energy development, was not immediately available for comment.
     
    UNESCO's report includes 17 recommendations. They include suggestions to work more closely with First Nations, conduct studies on water flow and improve monitoring.
     
    "The mission fully agrees with most observers that continuation of the development approach of the last decades renders the future of (the park) uncertain at the very best."
     
    Lepine welcomes the recommendations.
     
    "The report seems to capture all the concerns we have. There's still time to save the delta."
     
    Wood Buffalo National Park comprises 45,000 square kilometres that straddle the boundary between Alberta and the Northwest Territories. The park covers grasslands, wetlands and boreal forests laced with numerous rivers, creeks, lakes and ponds.
     
    It is home to the world's only breeding ground for endangered whooping cranes as well as to the largest herd of free-ranging wood buffalo left anywhere. It is also the summer habitat and breeding ground for billions of boreal songbirds whose migration routes spread throughout the continent.
     
    It became a UNESCO world heritage site in 1983.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Niagara Mom Accused Of Sexually Abusing Daughters As Part Of Child Exploitation Ring

    Niagara Mom Accused Of Sexually Abusing Daughters As Part Of Child Exploitation Ring
    Investigators say the 33-year-old woman, who cannot be identified to protect the identity of the children, also made her four-year-old daughter available for others to sexually assault.

    Niagara Mom Accused Of Sexually Abusing Daughters As Part Of Child Exploitation Ring

    Infamous Crack Video Of Late Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Made Public After Case Ends

    Infamous Crack Video Of Late Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Made Public After Case Ends
    The footage was released following the end of a court case involving Ford's friend and driver Alexander (Sandro) Lisi.

    Infamous Crack Video Of Late Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Made Public After Case Ends

    Doctor Heading Gord Downie's Brain Tumour Treatment A Longtime Tragically Hip Fan

    Doctor Heading Gord Downie's Brain Tumour Treatment A Longtime Tragically Hip Fan
    TORONTO — Gord Downie's chief oncologist has been to all but one of the Tragically Hip's farewell concerts and plans to attend each of the band's remaining shows, including the final stop on the tour in Kingston, Ont.

    Doctor Heading Gord Downie's Brain Tumour Treatment A Longtime Tragically Hip Fan

    Son Of Parliament Hill Shooting Hero Kevin Vickers Saves Another Woman's Life

    Son Of Parliament Hill Shooting Hero Kevin Vickers Saves Another Woman's Life
    Const. Andrew Vickers of Miramichi police responded Tuesday morning to the city's Centennial Bridge, where a 19-year-old woman had climbed onto the outside girder and appeared to be getting ready to jump.

    Son Of Parliament Hill Shooting Hero Kevin Vickers Saves Another Woman's Life

    Lightning Strike Sends Two To Hospital In Calgary, Non-Life Threatening Injuries

    Lightning Strike Sends Two To Hospital In Calgary, Non-Life Threatening Injuries
    CALGARY — Two people in Calgary who were close to a lightning strike have been sent to hospital.

    Lightning Strike Sends Two To Hospital In Calgary, Non-Life Threatening Injuries

    Former P.E.I. Mountie Charged After More Than 70 Guns Seized From His Home

    Former P.E.I. Mountie Charged After More Than 70 Guns Seized From His Home
    Forty-three-year-old Jeffrey Rae Gillis is scheduled for an appearance in provincial court in Charlottetown on Monday.

    Former P.E.I. Mountie Charged After More Than 70 Guns Seized From His Home