Canadian Manufacturing

Bitumen spill puts world scrutiny on Alberta’s new regulator: critic

by The Canadian Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Environment Energy Oil & Gas Alberta environment politics


Spill on Cold Lake weapons range has now released nearly one million litres of bitumen onto surface

EDMONTON—An environmental think-tank says an ongoing spill of tarry bitumen in northern Alberta is focusing the world’s attention on the province’s new regulator.

Chris Severson-Baker of the Pembina Institute says the spill from a Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. project on the Cold Lake weapons range is the first chance to assess the new Alberta Energy Regulator.

Severson-Baker says the province’s previous agency allowed the company to resume production after a similar spill in 2009, despite the fact the cause was never determined.

He says the new regulator has a chance to show that the province will tighten controls on the oilsands as the industry looks to increase exports to the United States.

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Newspapers from the Wall Street Journal to England’s The Guardian have written about the spill, which has now released nearly a million litres of bitumen onto the surface.

A recent study suggested that fewer than one per cent of environmental infractions in the oilsands result in enforcement actions.

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