By Letter to the Editor on January 13, 2021.
I am writing in appeal to Alberta ranchers, farmers, and perhaps primarily those who irrigate,
with respect to the imposed development of the open pit coal mines endorsed by our current
Provincial Government. I don’t wish to provide lengthy commentary so I’ll get right to the point.
I have been reading many of the submissions that have been written to the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada. I understand the argument by the pro development side of this issue which seems only able to talk about jobs and economic stimulus but not much else. I don’t disagree with people’s argument about the necessity of jobs at all. Having said that though, it does not mean that we throw everything else under the bus in order to achieve that. This then speaks to diversification within industry and the willingness to do something different and better.
However, that aside, two points which I’d like to raise and consider extremely important are these.
First, with regard to the reference of “possibly” 400 jobs, lets think about that for a moment. If the water allocations for the mine (which are going to be substantial) are going to retard the water allocations for downstream users such as irrigators, are we not robbing Peter to pay Paul?
What about those jobs and livelihoods in that agricultural sector that have been established long before Australia came to town?
Are we really going to make sense of the potential destruction of a long time established and well endorsed agricultural industry to be displaced by a foreign investor?
The farmers in question have enormous investments in their respective operations.
Is that suddenly a situation we can regard as, Too bad? To be frank, that seems treasonous to an industry that not only has in longevity but now continues to support this province.
My second point, directly relative to the first is the construction of the Oldman River Dam to further support agriculture. This development procured by a previous Conservative government produced a very negative impact on portions of three river valleys in order to achieve what was felt necessary by that same agricultural sector. However, given that the dam construction and the resulting reservoir was to benefit the irrigation districts downstream, how is that in keeping with a sizeable water allocation being provided to the coal mining venture and inevitably short-changing the necessary water allocations to existing farm industry?
“Completed in 1991, the Oldman River dam was one of a series of large-scale dam projects such as the Gardiner dam on the South Saskatchewan River that were constructed after 1945 to support agricultural and economic development in the arid regions of the SSRB.”
To me this seems a contradiction. I think it’s only fair to ask yourself, and the Alberta Government, what is the rationale in this decision and where, as long time committed agricultural professionals do you stand in this and certainly, WHAT DO YOU STAND TO LOSE?
Respectfully,
Bob Costa
Wholeheartedly agree! That this Kenney UCP government is even considering the Grassy Mountain project is yet another example of their trainwreck. It’s as if they’re trying to do as much damage to Alberta as they can before they get voted out.
To submit protest commentary re: this Grassy Mountain proposed project, there is a “Submit a Comment’ Link here”
iaac-aeic.gc.ca/050/evaluation…..waternotcoal
I already submitted by comment of concern.
A post, “Mountains not Mines” by Corb Lund can also be read here:fb.watch/2ZW2-UgB_7/
Also, burning coal to make steel is entering the dinosaur age. Much more modern methods of making steel are coming down the tube. Again, that the Kenney UCP is even considering opening up our eastern Rocky Mountain slopes to open pit coal mining is outrageous.
thank you for the letter – makes me recall the line from the “rime of the ancient mariner”: “Water, water, every where,/Nor any drop to drink…”