‘A responsibility to protect’: Canada launches independent agency to manage freshwater
Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault says the new Canada Water Agency comes at a time...
A billion-dollar plan to build a 6,300-bed resort in the glacial wilderness near Invermere is essentially dead in the water after B.C. Environment Minister Mary Polak ruled Thursday that construction on the controversial Jumbo Glacier Resort did not start in time.
That means the project’s environmental assessment certificate has expired and the proponent, Glacier Resorts Ltd, would need to re-apply if it wanted to continue with the project.
“We are overjoyed with the province’s decision,” said Robyn Duncan of Wildsight, a group that has fought the project for years. “This is the only reasonable outcome for this beleaguered project.”
The province granted an environmental assessment certificate to Glacier Resorts Ltd. in 2004 and the certificate was renewed in 2009. It could not be renewed for a second time, and the Environmental Assessment Act requires that projects be “substantially started” within the time limit set out in the certificate.
Polak ruled that the project hadn’t been “substantially started” by Oct. 12, 2014, 10 years after the certificate was issued.
Last fall, DeSmog Canada published a 13-part series on Jumbo Glacier Resort, examining concerns about democracy, court challenges to the project, the concerns of the Ktunaxa Nation, threats to grizzlies and the threat posed by climate change to the Jumbo Glacier.
Photo: Howard P Smith, phototide.com
Get the inside scoop on The Narwhal’s environment and climate reporting by signing up for our free newsletter. In the early 2010s, John Rustad, current leader...
Continue readingFederal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault says the new Canada Water Agency comes at a time...
The Greens lost by just 60 votes in West Vancouver-Sea to Sky last election. This...
A provincial emergency order has kept Lake Pisiquid filled for more than 16 months. It’s...