Alberta Energy Regulator guilty of ‘environmental racism’ says Fort Chipewyan First Nation chief

Regulator issues penalty, conditions on Imperial Oil amid ongoing Kearl investigation.

Imperial Oil

Kearl tarsands mine, Imperial Oil. Aerial photo: Danielle Paradis/APTN


The Chief of Fort Chipewyan First Nation says the latest decision by the province’s energy regulator to fine an oil company that polluted the environment is something it expects from the Alberta government.

On Thursday, Imperial Oil was fined $50,000 after the province’s energy regulator concluded the company broke environmental laws when wastewater containing oilsands tailings  seeped outside its lease boundary in 2022.

Chief Allan Adam’s community lies downstream.

“This fine here is telling the world and the big corporations of the world ‘come here to Alberta, everything’s good.  Come invest in the oilsands, we’ll make your plan happen,” Adam said. “I’m here to tell you something different.  If you come here, destroying our way of life we will see you in court.

“In our view this is a direct attack on our human way of life, our human health. It’s like germ warfare,” Adam said.  “We are under constant attack, 24-7, 365 days a year and nobody wants to do anything about it.”

The fine is accompanied by requirements for mitigation plans and research into the environmental effects of such wastewater and represents only the first part of the regulator’s inquiry.

“You’d think the Alberta government would stand for something that’s right, but they continue to stand for something that’s not true and it’s cause and effects.  They’re not standing behind some of the credible science-evidence that are coming out, pointing in the directions of unsafe conditions here in the community,” Adam told APTN News. “Industry and everybody else will get a free pass with this government in place, because they don’t look at the adverse affects what’s going on downstream.”

Energy regulator said the investigation remains ongoing

“These findings and resulting compliance and enforcement decisions do not encompass all potential contraventions that may have occurred at Kearl,” the regulator said in a statement.

Although the fine for two contraventions is the maximum allowed under Alberta law, environmental groups scoffed at its size. Imperial reported $1.1 billion in income in the second quarter of 2024.

In May 2022, Imperial told the regulator that discoloured water had pooled on the surface near the boundary of its Kearl oilsands lease.

Area First Nations, including Fort Chipewyan, were notified but not given further updates until February 2023, when information that the release contained tailings seepage was disclosed along with news of a second release of 5.3 million litres of contaminated wastewater from a holding pond.

Indigenous communities were angered that their members had been harvesting in the area for nine months without being told of possible contamination. So was the Regional Municipality of Fort McMurray and water users as far downstream as the Northwest Territories.

The regulator issued an environmental protection order in March.

The regulator’s decision shows that by late 2022, Imperial knew the seepage locations exceeded guidelines for sulphates, iron, dissolved metals, hydrocarbons and arsenic. The regulator said impacts to wildlife have been “minimal.”

The investigation found a seepage pathway was created by sand used for roads, pipelines and other infrastructure. That pathway bypassed Imperial’s interception system.

“The (interception system) design did not account for a shallow groundwater seepage mechanism via the sand fill layer placed during construction, and therefore did not detect nor capture the industrial wastewater as it flowed off lease,” the report says.

Imperial has since more than tripled the total number of pumping and monitoring wells to address seepage. There are now more than 800 monitoring wells in the area.

The company continues to detect tailings seepage. On its website, it says shallow groundwater that exceeds guidelines has been found up to 150 metres off-site and contaminated deeper groundwater has been found a kilometre past the boundary.

“We are confident the actions we have taken to address the issue and the extensive measures we have put in place to refine and strengthen our seepage monitoring and collection systems are working,” said Imperial spokeswoman Lisa Schmidt in an email. “We continue to monitor and provide regular updates and data to local Indigenous communities.

“We regret this incident occurred.”

In addition to the fine, Imperial is required to tell the regulator by Nov. 1 about how it will share lessons learned from the release with other oilsands operators as well as submit a plan to mitigate its impacts. By Nov. 30, it must also develop a research plan to study the environmental impacts of oilsands tailings water.

Phillip Meintzer of the Alberta Wilderness Association called the penalty inadequate, noting the seepage continues.

‘Environmental racism’ 

“It just seems like so little,” he said. “If that’s the maximum penalty, it’s not going to deter.”

Alienor Rougenot of Environmental Defence called the penalty too little, too late.

“Imperial gets away with paying a trivial fine and completing an ‘I’ll do better next time’ take-home assignment,” she said in an email. “The quality assurance measures imposed today should have been in place long before Imperial was ever allowed to operate.”

Three investigations resulted from the release.

An internal investigation by Deloitte found both the company and the regulator followed the rules on disclosing the incident, but concluded those rules were weak and undefined. A federal investigation remains underway.

Adam said they intend to get to the bottom of the issues people on his nation continue to suffer from with the money it received from the Federal government for a 10 year health study.  The First Nation has filed a lawsuit against the regulator for failing to keep it informed of the release.

“To give Imperial oil a $50,000.00 fine, it just goes to show the Alberta government is willing to do anything,” Adam said. “It is inherently racist.  We call it environmental racism.”

With files from the Canadian Press

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