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Jul 17, 2009
Focus: Environment
Action Request: Write E-Mail
Location: Canada

EBR Registry No.: 010-6516

As the government moves forward with the implementation of the Green Energy Act, the Ministry of Environment (MOE) has begun to draft the regulations that will guide the process and set the standard for the protection of natural heritage features. The first step is the Renewable Energy Approval regulation recently posted on the Environmental Registry for public comment. This regulation outlines the approval process for renewable energy projects. Several changes to the regulation are needed to ensure that the development of “green” energy is truly green and does not compromise the protection and restoration of Ontario’s natural heritage. You can now comment on the proposed regulation through the Environmental Registry. The deadline for comments is July 24, 2009.

The government should be applauded for its efforts to expand the use of clean and renewable sources of energy through its Green Energy and Green Economy Act, 2009. The new legislation aims to mitigate the impacts of climate change by facilitating the development of renewable sources of energy. To do so, it is removing barriers to development in part by streamlining the approval process for proposed projects.

What we need to ensure, however, is that in streamlining approvals, the government puts in place adequate protections for Ontario’s wildlife and natural environment. In responding to climate change we must keep in mind the importance of maintaining biodiversity and protecting natural communities and systems in order to enhance landscape resilience and options for adaptation.

Outlined below is a list of concerns that must be addressed.

  1. The key mechanism proposed for protecting natural heritage features is a 120 metre “setback” from significant features. To be effective, the significant natural heritage features to be protected through the approval process must include provincially, regionally and locally significant features. Given that the streamlined process will now bypass any protection formerly provided for locally and regionally significant features through municipal official plans, the new approval process must ensure that these features are protected. Project proponents must be required to assess and identify significant features (i.e. locally, regionally and provincially significant) within 120 metres of their proposed projects as part of their submission for approval.
  2. The proposed approval process explicitly prohibits projects from being sited within some natural heritage features (e.g., significant wetlands in southern Ontario, provincial parks and conservation reserves), but does not prohibit them within others (e.g. significant wetlands in northern Ontario, significant woodlands, significant valleylands, significant wildlife habitat, significant Areas of Natural and Scientific Interest). The approval process must explicitly prohibit the siting of projects within any locally, regionally or provincially significant natural heritage features.
  3. Despite the 120 metre setback, the proposed approval process would allow projects to be sited within the setback (i.e. closer to the natural heritage feature) if impacts are mitigated. There is no test, standard or threshold for the mitigation requirement, leaving the door wide open for projects to infringe upon the 120 metre setback. If green energy is to be truly green, the setback must offer a clear minimum standard for protection. The approval process must prohibit development within the 120 metre setback unless the project proponent can demonstrate that there will be no harm to the significant natural heritage feature.
  4. In other provincial guidelines, such as the Natural Heritage Reference Manual, the recommendation of a 120 metre buffer is acknowledged to be more than required to protect a natural feature in some cases, and less than required in other cases. Where it is determined (e.g. through public consultation) that the 120 metre buffer is likely to be insufficient, the Director issuing the approval must have the discretion to require the proponent to undertake further studies and to extend the buffer and/or mitigate the harmful impacts.
  5. The impacts of some forms of renewable energy are poorly understood and a subject of considerable controversy. In order to learn more about these impacts and improve our ability to address them, monitoring and assessing impacts will be critical. The approval process should require project proponents to prepare a monitoring plan as part of their submission for approval.

Make your voice heard! Let the Ministry of Environment know that the Renewable Energy Approval regulation must be revised to adequately protect Ontario’s natural heritage.

Please keep in mind that original responses are weighed more heavily than are form letters. We suggest that you use the points above to draft your own letter and either post it online to the link below or send a hard copy to the listed address by July 24, 2009. Be sure to reference the EBR registry number: 010-6516.

If you are pressed for time, a sample letter has also been prepared. Please cut and paste the text below, post it on the EBR or send a hard copy to the address at the bottom of this page.

Please send a copy of your letter to Ontario Nature at 366 Adelaide St., W., Suite 201, Toronto, ON M5V 1R9 or email to amberc@ontarionature.org. You can also fax your letter to (416) 444-9866.

For more information and to submit comments online click here: www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTA2NDQ5&statusId=MTU5NjQ1&language=en

Or send a hard copy to:

Marcia Wallace, Manager
Ministry of the Environment
Environmental Programs Division
Program Planning and Implementation Branch
55 St. Clair Avenue West, Floor 7
Toronto Ontario M4V 2Y7


SAMPLE LETTER

DATE

Marcia Wallace, Manager
Ministry of the Environment
Environmental Programs Division
Program Planning and Implementation Branch
55 St. Clair Avenue West, Floor 7
Toronto Ontario M4V 2Y7

Dear Ms. Wallace,

RE: Proposed Ministry of Environment Regulation to Implement the Green Energy and Green Economy Act. EBR Registry No.: 010-6516

I would like to congratulate the government on its efforts to promote the development and use of renewable energy in Ontario. The Green Energy and Green Economy Act is a promising step towards mitigating the impacts of climate change.

At the same time, however, I am writing to express my concern about certain aspects of the proposed Renewable Energy Approval regulation. Revisions to the proposed approval process are necessary to ensure that “green” energy is truly green. The streamlining of the approval process must not compromise the protection of Ontario’s natural heritage, and therefore I urge you to make the following revisions to the regulation:

  1. Require project proponents to assess and identify locally, regionally and provincially significant natural heritage features within 120 metres of proposed projects as a condition of approval.
  2. Prohibit the siting of projects within any locally, regionally or provincially significant natural heritage features.
  3. Prohibit development within the proposed 120 metre setback unless the project proponent can demonstrate that there will be no harm to the significant natural heritage feature.
  4. Empower Director(s) issuing approvals to extend the 120 metre setback where necessary to prevent harm to a significant natural heritage feature.
  5. Require project proponents to prepare, as a condition of approval, a plan to monitor and assess project impacts on the natural environment.

I appreciate the opportunity to comment on the proposed regulation. I trust that it will be revised along the lines suggested above so that it offers adequate protection for Ontario’s wildlife and natural environment. Only then can Ontario hope to position itself as a world leader in the development and use of “green” energy.

Yours truly,
Your name and address

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Posted: Jul 17, 2009 12:03pm
Jul 8, 2009
Focus: Environment
Action Request: Write E-Mail
Location: Canada
Please Distribute Widely

Action Letter: Michael Ignatieff is Stuck in the Tar Sands

“It [the tar sands] changes everything about our economic future.  It changes everything about Canada’s importance in the world” – Michael Ignatieff (January 14, 2009)

Dear TarSandsWatch.org Subscriber,

Let’s be very clear, Canada’s tar sands are the most environmentally destructive project on Earth.  The process of extracting and upgrading bitumen from the tar sands generates 3 – 5 times as much greenhouse gas pollution as the production of conventional oil.  There are dramatic environmental and social impacts caused by tar sands production and First Nations communities near tar sands development have raised alarming concerns over unusually high rates of rare cancers. 

Increasingly the tar sands are becoming the dirty backbone of Canada’s economy.  Rather than moving towards a new green energy economy, Canada is moving backwards by increasing our addiction to fossil fuels and by reviving our colonial role as the hewers of wood and drawers of water.

WHERE IS MICHAEL IGNATIEFF?

Since assuming leadership of the Liberal Party, Michael Ignatieff has championed the tar sands as the way of the future saying that, “The oil sands are an integral part of the future of Canada”.  Ignatieff’s strong support for the tar sands is increasingly making Young Liberals, Liberal MPs, and individuals across the country uncomfortable.

HELP MICHAEL IGNATIEFF OUT OF THE TAR SANDS!

Michael Ignatieff is stuck in the tar sands and we need your help to get him out!

·        Send a letter to Michael Ignatieff and encourage him to say “no” to the tar sands and “yes” to a new energy economy.  Click HERE to send a letter.

 

·        Visit www.tarsandswatch.org to join the campaign to help Ignatieff out of the tar sands.

The Tar Sands Watch Team,

www.tarsandswatch.org

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Posted: Jul 8, 2009 11:30am
Apr 16, 2009
Focus: Environment
Action Request: Meeting
Location: Canada

The Polaris Institute, in collaboration with the Sierra Club of Canada and the Other Side Radio (CFMU-Hamilton) presents:

 Tar Sands Showdown: Campaign Training Workshops

April 24th – 25th      Hamilton       Skydragon Centre, 27 King William St.

• May 1st – 2nd          London         Wemple Student Lounge, 266 Epworth Ave, King's College, University of Western Ontario

Take Action Now: participate in your local workshops and build the tools to collectively take on the Tar Sands!

Tar Sands Showdown is taking place in five Southwestern Ontario cities.  Each workshop will illustrate how local Ontario communities are affected by the tar sands, and how Canada can move away from dirty oil and towards a green energy economy.  The workshops will include a Friday evening information session and a day-long workshop on Saturday.      

The Friday evening will consist of a workshop and discussion about the tar sands, and how we're all affected in terms of our environment, our economy and our energy future.

Saturday is focused on what we can collectively do to move away from the tar sands.
The schedule is posted here: 
www.tarsandswatch.org/files/Workshop%20schedule.pdf
      

Register online at: http://www.tarsandswatch.org/tar-sands-showdown-campaign-training-workshops-registration-information
  
Admission is sliding scale: $5-$25. No one will be turned away due to lack of funds.

The Polaris Institute is committed to enabling social movements to  work together for change in an age of corporate driven globalization.   We are interested in creating a space where dialogue and collaboration  is fostered as we work towards a just and sustainable future.  Work with us and other activists as we educate and empower ourselves to resist the tar sands and start building a new energy economy for the future!

Please check  www.tarsandswatch.org for other information on the workshops

Or contact Darren Puscas at 
polaris.tarsands@gmail.com for further information

www.polarisinstitute.org

www.sierraclub.ca 

www.oside.ca

----------

Workshop Objective and Strategies:


OBJECTIVE: The overall objective of these workshops is to provide a training process for concerned individuals in a given community or workplace setting to engage in concrete action strategies and tactics on tar sands issues.

More specifically, the workshops are designed to train people to implement strategies and tactics aimed at challenging the production, sale and export of tar sands crude. In so doing, the objective is to build a broader base of core organizers to move this campaign forward.

STRATEGIES: The workshops will be designed to be as participatory as possible by drawing on the knowledge and experience of the participants. Participants will be encouraged to identify and develop strategies and tactics to take forward. The following is a short list of potential strategic action outcomes of the workshops:

           • Public education campaign linking the tar sands to manufacturing job losses
           • Local municipal government resolutions refusing to purchase tar sands crude
           • Building a community alliance for a new energy & green jobs economy
           • Organizing community opposition to tar sands infrastructure like pipelines/refineries

Jessie Kalman

Outgoing Tar Sands Watch Campaigner

jessie@polarisinstitute.org

(613) 237-1717 ext. 106

*Elly Adeland will be taking over my former duties as of May 2009

Her email address is elly@polarisinstitute.org, the extension remains the same

www.tarsandswatch.org

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Posted: Apr 16, 2009 10:16am
Mar 10, 2008
White Pine Pictures & Clearwater Media present:

TAR SANDS: THE SELLING OF ALBERTA
What price is Canada willing to pay for a stake
in this century's greatest energy bonanza?

Director Tom Radford
Producer Peter Raymont
World Premiere broadcast on Doc Zone
CBC TV - Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 9:00pm

"Tar Sands: The Selling of Alberta" captures the
intersecting storylines of a remarkable cast of characters
eager to cash in on the oil boom in Fort McMurray, Alberta.
Washington lobbyists, Newfie pipefitters, Chinese investors
and Norwegian industrialists descend on tar-soaked "Fort
McMoney", a modern-day Eldorado, where rents are sky-
rocketing and cocaine abuse is four times the provincial
average. Up for grabs - a stake in a $100 billion energy
bonanza and Canada's economic sovereignty.

This one-hour documentary, commissioned by the CBC,
tracks the growth of the world's largest reserve of
"unconventional" oil. A Florida-sized "environmental
sacrifice zone" has become Canada's contribution to U.S.
energy security in the post-9/11 world. But for many,
the Tar Sands are a global warming disaster.

As Fort McMurray bursts at the seams, children from Thunder
Bay to Cape Breton are made tar-sands orphans by their
migrant-worker parents. Canada's petrodollar breaks the back
of the manufacturing economy in the East. Cancer rates
skyrocket downstream of Fort McMurray while Rocky Mountain
glaciers melt and disappear.
And all the while, Alberta
crude goes south to US markets while Eastern Canada pays
ever more for insecure Middle East oil. In an isolated
region of the north, Canada's future is being carved out of
the forest at a breakneck pace. "Tar Sands: The Selling of
Alberta
" questions how much Canada is willing to sacrifice
for a stake in this century's greatest energy bonanza.

"Tar Sand" features interviews with stake-holders from all
sides including former Alberta premier Peter Lougheed
(1971-1985); journalist and author Andrew Nikiforuk; General
(retired) Charles Wald, Former Deputy Commander, USAF;
oil broker Paul Michael Wihbey, President of the U.S. company
GWEST Consulting; Jeff Wiscombe, welder from Newfoundland
and Stig Bergseth, Senior VP, STATOIL, Norway's largest
company.

After co-directing the award-winning Arctic Dreamer in
2004, two of Canada's most respected documentary filmmakers
reunite as Director and Producer of Tar Sands: The Selling
of Alberta. Edmonton-based director Tom Radford's
career spans thirty five years, portraying the distinctive
character of the West and North to Canada and the world.
Producer, Peter Raymont is celebrating the 30th year of
White Pine Pictures, having traveled to Ethiopia, Nicaragua,
India, Rwanda, Chile and the High Arctic to direct and
produce over 100 documentary films, including the Emmy
Award-winning Shake Hands with the Devil: the Journey
of Romeo Dallaire.

Running Time: 41:38
http://www.whitepinepictures.com
http://www.clearwatermedia.com

USEFUL WEBSITES:

http://www.oilsandswatch.org
http://www.oilsandsdiscovery.com
http://www.tarsandswatch.org
http://www.capp.ca/default.asp?V_DOC_ID=688
http://www.oilsandsreview.com
http://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/recent/tarsandsfaq
http://oilsandstruth.org
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Posted: Mar 10, 2008 11:32am

 

 
 
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