The Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and Canadian governments are reviewing a section of the Atlantic Accords that critics say lets offshore oil and gas operators veto a wide swath of information from being released publicly, including environmental聽and safety data, wrote Ottawa鈥檚 :
Meanwhile, as governments keep talking, operators continue to use the controversial section to block access to information.
Gail Fraser, a biologist and professor聽in the [Faculty of Environmental Studies]聽at 91亚色聽聽in Toronto, placed five access to information requests in 2007 with the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board, a joint federal-provincial body that regulates oil and gas drilling and production off the Newfoundland coast. The board cited the same section of the Canada-Newfoundland Atlantic Accord Implementation Act to deny all five requests: Section 119(2).
But Fraser said she wasn鈥檛 asking for proprietary information, just environmental data about the frequency of oil sheens, for instance, and other pollutant information so she could compare the environmental effects predicted in the environmental assessments of oil production operations聽 to what鈥檚 actually happening. 鈥淭he government is permitting oil and gas operators to operate in a public domain. And the waste involved in these developments is huge. And so it鈥檚 important for the public to understand what are the effects of those wastes. And so, you can鈥檛,鈥 she said in a phone interview with The Hill Times.
鈥淩ight now, the public is essentially in the dark as to the effects of oil development in the Grand Banks (off the Newfoundland coast).鈥
While there is obviously information that would make sense from a business perspective to not release publicly, said Fraser, she would like to see Section 119(2) scrapped and revised so that it is not applied to environmental and safety information. The Newfoundland and Nova Scotia boards have written to the federal and provincial ministers responsible for energy to ask them to review the section in Atlantic Accords, something Fraser welcomed.
Meanwhile, Fraser submitted another set of access to information requests to the Newfoundland board earlier this month and said she鈥檚 not hopeful she鈥檒l get what she wants.
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Posted by Elizabeth Monier-Williams, research communications officer, with files courtesy of YFile 鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.
