Media ReleaseMay 8, 2008 Kearl Panel Fails to Answer Federal Court's QuestionsMedia Contact: Simon Dyer The report of the re-convened Joint Review Panel assessing Imperial Oil's Kearl Oil Sands Project is evasive, convoluted and fails to answer the questions directed to it by the Federal Court of Canada says a coalition of environmental groups that initiated the court challenge.
In March 2008, the Joint Review Panel was directed by the Federal Court to justify its conclusion that the expected 3.7 million tonne increase in greenhouse gas pollution from the project would have an insignificant impact on the environment. "The Panel took at face value the provincial government's 'endorsement' of the intensity targets as rendering all environmental impacts related to greenhouse gas emissions as acceptable." said Simon Dyer, Oil Sands Program Director of Pembina Institute. "But they didn't explain why intensity targets--which will allow emissions to continue to grow--will ensure the greenhouse gas emissions of an oil sands mine has an insignificant impact on the environment."
Coalition members include the Pembina Institute, Toxics Watch Society, Prairie Acid Rain Coalition and Sierra Club Canada. They say that the panel report cites actions on non-greenhouse gas pollution and corporate programs unrelated to the facility as mitigating the 3.7 million tonne increase in greenhouse gas emissions caused by the Kearl project.
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