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February 07, 2014 --- Vol. 08, No. 06February 2014

Premier: B.C. environmental assessments too ‘long, complex’

British Columbia Premier Christy Clark has ordered a review of the province’s environmental assessment process, saying the current system has become too cumbersome.

Clark revealed few details about the evaluation, but the Environment Ministry said a key aim of the mandate from Clark is to cut the timeline for environmental assessments in the province.

The premier made the announcement at the AME BC Mineral Exploration Roundup in Vancouver Jan. 27, in the middle of a speech about extending a C$10-million tax-credit program to B.C.’s mining industry for another year.

The Canadian Press reported that she said environmental reviews of major projects are crucial, and while the current process is rigorous and transparent, the province’s environmental assessment office can “do better.”

“In my view, it is better to do the hard and rigorous work at the front end and get it right, than to endure decades of questions and debate and acrimony about why and how it was done,” said Clark.

The premier told reporters she believes the existing system has gotten less predictable and more inefficient.

“My view is if a project is environmentally unsustainable and the wrong project, we should say no. If it’s a project that is environmentally sound, we should say yes,” she said. “But I think over the years, the environmental assessment process has gotten so long, so difficult and so complex, that communities, proponents can’t get a yes, can’t get a no.”

Clark added she believes getting an efficient approval or rejection would be best for economic development in B.C.

In an emailed statement, the Environment Ministry said the premier has given her a mandate to ensure timely decisions.

“We know the value to any company of time spent in regulatory processes and the premier has asked for a review the Environmental Assessment Office, with a view to ensuring that our economic development objectives and our environmental protection objectives are in balance,” the ministry said.

One of the aims of the review, which is internal and will issue no final report to be made public, will be to “decrease the duration of environmental assessments, from beginning to end,” while ensuring the integrity of the process.

The province will also consider having applicant companies pay “modest” fees for environmental assessments.

The province’s environmental assessment processes have come under fire in the past, according to the publication.

There are currently 20 major mines and expansions going through B.C.’s environmental assessment and permitting processes.

Clark also touted the success of her jobs plan, saying the B.C. mining industry has created more than 800 jobs since 2011 due to two new mines, with more to come.







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