St. John's lawyer suing province over Placentia Bay aquaculture project - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 07:05 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

St. John's lawyer suing province over Placentia Bay aquaculture project

Owen Myers is taking the province to court in hopes of quashing Minister Perry Trimper's decision to give the first green light to the project without a full environmental impact statement.

Owen Myers says province made a mistake releasing the project without environmental impact statement

The Grieg NL Seafarms Ltd. project proposal would transform Placentia Bay into one of the largest aquaculture operations in Canada. (CBC)

A St. John's lawyer is taking the province to court over its release of a multi-million dollarproposed aquaculture project from environmental assessment.

In July,the province announced that the $250 million projectby Grieg NL Seafarms Ltd.was released from furtherprovincial environmental assessments, clearing a big hurdle for theproposal thatwould transform Placentia Bay into one of the largest aquaculture operations in the country. In addition to 11 sea cage sites in the bay, the projectincludes a $75-million hatchery proposed for Marystown.

Owen Myers, a lawyer, filed the lawsuit as a private citizen. ((CBC))

Owen Myers, a lawyer who has been practicing for almost 30 years, has filed the lawsuit as a private citizen, in the hopes of seeingthatdecision made by Minister of Environment and Conservation Perry Trimper quashed.

"I do think that Minister Trimper made a very big mistake releasing this without a full EIS [environmental impact statement], which allows the public to really have a reasonable and decent chance to participate in public hearings and debate this," Myers told CBC Radio's The Broadcast.

Just to blow it through without properly complying with the legislation I think is something, hopefully, I can convince the court to set aside.- Owen Myers

Myers is concerned the technology Grieg will use is not yetscientificallyproven and that this expansion could "wipe out" salmon stocks in the area.

"It seems to me totally unimaginable that a project with so many unknowns, and there are so many unsubstantiated statements made by the proponent, that the minister just doesn't say 'Look, this needs a full EIS,'"he said.

"At the end of the day if the minister wants to approve the project, well that's in the minister's discretion. But just to blow it through without properly complying with the legislation I think is something, hopefully, I can convince the court to set aside."

Questions within the industry

The executive director of the Newfoundland Aquaculture Industry Association said he is also hearing questions about the proposed project.

"As an industry we fully support expansion of farming seafood in Newfoundland and Labrador, whether it's mussels, oysters, clams, trout, cod or Atlantic salmon," said Mark Lane.

"But we also support thorough research development, first and foremost,[and]stabilization and the sustainable growth of the industry."

Lane said he's also hearing concernswithin the industryaboutthe proposed hatchery technology and its style of net pens, which would be new to Newfoundland and Labrador. Other questions include how theIcelandic sterile fish Greig plan's to usewill cope in the waters of Placentia Bay and whether or not there is room in the market for more salmon coming from Newfoundland and Labrador alone.

Lane said the province'sindustry is currently producing about 20,000 tonnes of salmon and that Grieg's project would add upwards of 30-25,000 tonnes.

Government response

In its release from further environmental assessment, the government listed several conditions, including that only triploid Atlantic salmon a genetically modified, sterile fishbe used and the company must submit annual progress reports.

In a statement to CBC, the Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture saidthe government is reviewing an updated business plan fromGrieg.

"There are several steps that must take place before the conditions of the memorandum of understanding are reached," the statement said.

"With the environmental assessment and regulatory process now complete, work is underway to start the aquaculture licensing process. This will include a thorough review of the proposed site and hatchery. The Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture is awaiting formal site applications for the proposed marine farm sites from the company. This license review will include input from municipal, provincial and federal governments."

With files from The Broadcast