Mi'kmaq voice concerns over proposed drilling as BP Canada rig en route to Nova Scotia
Drilling licences not yet approved; exploration project may have impacts on Mi'kmaq fishing areas
Activists served lobster rolls in the lobby ofthe building that's home to British Petroleum (BP) Canada's Halifax headquarters this week, as part of an "Unwelcoming Party" for an oil rig already en route to set up offshore of Nova Scotia.
Washing up with the news of BP's plansare concerns of how the project could affect First Nationsfood, social and ceremonial fishing.
"We wantthem toknow they aren't welcome here. They never will be,"saidMi'kmawMichelle Paul, who helped organize the demonstration on Wednesday alongside theCouncil of Canadians.
Paul tried to hand deliver a signed card to BP's office but was stopped by building managers and a large police presence.
"As a rights-holder, I was offended when I heard BP issetting up in our waters. I wanted to tell them face to face."
No drilling yet
On April 7, the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board (CNSOPB), authorized BP to carry out "preparatory activities,"allowing the company to enter Nova Scotia waters, but hasyet to approve any of the four drillinglicences BP applied for as part of the Scotia Basin Exploration Drilling Project.
BP's proposal includesmultiple exploratory wells roughly 330 kmfrom Nova Scotia's south shore. In its finalreport on the project,the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agencylooked at potential effects from the proposed wells onan assessmentarea thatincludes First Nations food, social and ceremonial fishing (FSC) areas,and the mitigation measures proposed by BP.
The report states the activity that comes withdrilling and operating a drilling rigcould affect fish habitats and water and sediment quality,leading fish to avoid the FSC areas and adversely affecting First Nations' catch. The report says these effects are predicted to be temporary and reversible.
Worry runs deep
"Is there nothing sacred?," asked Paul, who saidshe isn't surprised federal and provincial governments are considering the project despite potential impacts tothe environment and First Nations communities.
Paul saidshe doesn't want to see "a DeepwaterHorizon in our territory."
The Deepwater Horizon was arigowned by Transocean and leased byBPthat exploded and sank in in the Gulf of Mexico in2010.Elevencrewmen were killed and officials estimated that 4.9 millions barrels of crude oil were leaked.It was the largest spill ever in U.S. waters.
Paul said it's not just the ecosystem she's concerned about. Shesaidshe's still waiting for Canada to "take the treaties off the shelf" and allow the Mi'kmaqmore access to commercial fisheriesand to theireconomic benefit.
"Even though the government has set [the area] aside for traditional use, when it comes to profit, they're going to do what they're going to do. There's a long history of [governments]disrespecting [theMi'kmaq]."
She saidshe also wants the government to change the way it consults with First Nations on natural resource matters, giving ancestral practices more weight.
Consultation ongoing
The Assembly of Nova Scotia Mi'kmaqChiefs, which is consultedon thesematters through theKwilmu'kw Maw-klusuaqn Negotiation Office (KMKNO), said it recommended aMi'kmaqFisheries/Traditional Use Study that the regulatory bodies carried out,"to mitigate any possible disturbance to the Mi'kmaq fisheries."
"The Mi'kmaq have fished off the shores of Nova Scotia since time immemorial.The Mi'kmaq Nation continues to fish for Food, Social and Ceremonial, as well as communal commercial purposes in the project area of the Scotian Basin project," said KMKNODirector of ConsultationTwila Gaudet in a statement to CBCNews.
"Although Canada and Nova Scotia may feel that there are boundaries for Mi'kmaq harvesting, this is not the way that the Mi'kmaq have lived or continued to live, or how we see traditional harvesting areas of any species."
Before any drilling operations begin, KMKNO said"further government approvals and continued consultation with the Mi'kmaq of Nova Scotia will both be required."
A spokesperson for theCNSOPBsaid the lengthyregulatoryprocess, which includes "rigorous consultation"is still ongoing and there are no guarantees. They addedthatBP "is awareof the risk" of transporting the rig before drilling is approved. The spokesperson was unable to estimate if or when approval for drilling would be given.
Anita Perry, a spokespersonfor BP Canada, said the company "engaged in comprehensiveFirst Nations consultation since 2013," and that the company issatisfied with the regional environmental assessment.
"We've had a lot of great dialogue with the Mi'kmaq," said Perry. "Our project is approximately 300 kilometres offshore, and in our view, safe operations is our priority."
Fishing by inherent right
"As a fisherwoman, it is something weall worry about and that we all think about," said Mi'kmaqMarilynn-Leigh Francis, who fishes out of Yarmouth, N.S., about 500 kmwest of the Scotia Basin site.
"I won't support any oil drilling anywhere near Nova Scotia. We don't have many [natural] resources left, and if something were to happen on that rig, it's not just a matter of fishing for a livelihood, it's a matter of sustaining ourway of life. Interrupting the way we've [fished] for thousands and thousands of years."
Francis saidshe's been fishing with family members"by her inherent right" for 20years,outside of Canada's fishingregulations, and is the only person doing so in Mi'kmaqterritory.She saidthe integrity of Nova Scotia's ecosystems and Mi'kmaq ancestral territory"can't be bought," no matter the economic benefit.
She said that whileshe's never fished the waters targeted by BP, she's prepared to defend the Mi'kmaq's right to if permission is given to start drilling. She said protests will likely take to the water.
"I've got my own boat, so I'm going to be out there either way. I'd hope others would go out, too. There's a lot of warriors in Mi'kma'ki."