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Glacier tourism plan in Jasper park approved

The federal government has given a green light to a new paid tourist attraction in Alberta's Jasper National Park called the Glacier Discovery Walk.

Visitors to Alberta's Jasper National Park will soon be able toget "an iconic"tourism experience by walking alongsidea glacier, Environment Minister Peter Kent announced Thursday.

The minister responsible for Parks Canada said the federal government has approved the environmental assessment done for theGlacier Discovery Walk, a project proposed by a tourism company that already operates in the national park.

The approval of the assessment means Brewster Travel Canada has been given the regulatory green light to go ahead with its venture.

"I'd like to assure you and all Canadians that as a world leader in conservation,Parks Canada would not approve this project if there were environmental concerns that could not be addressed," Kent said at a news conference in Ottawa. "The Glacier Discovery Walk in Jasper National Park, I believe, will very quickly become an iconic Canadian tourism experience."

Brewster Travel Canada wants to build a viewing platform that would extend over the Sunwapta Valley at the end of a 400-metretrail along the Icefields Parkway, and Parks Canada agreed to consider the idea, subject to public consultation and an environmental assessment.

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Kent and Brewster president Michael Hannan, who was alsoat the press conference, said the consultations were robust, transparentand inclusive.

Critics 'disappointed' by decision

But there have been critics ofthe project who lobbied the government not to approve it because of concerns over privatizing part of a public park and the potentialeffects on wildlife and the landscape.

TheCanadian Parks and Wilderness Society said it was "extremely disappointed" with the government's decision.

"We're opposed to this massive development because the long-term impact it may have on wildlife in the area, including mountain goats and other sensitive species, is simply not known,"Eric Hbert-Daly,the group'snational executive director, said in a news release.

The group said thetourist attractionis driven more by commercial interests rather than ecological ones and that it's not appropriate for a national park.

The company, however, says that it is committed to sustainable development and thatthrough the interpretive walk visitors willlearnaboutglaciers, ecology, geology,and about the aboriginal and socialhistoryof the area. The trail will alsobe fully accessible, regardless of the mobility limitations of some visitors.

The federal government gave the go-ahead Thursday to a trail to view the glacier in Jasper National Park, following an environmental assessment of the project. (Brewster Travel Canada)

The tourism company, which has commissioned a number of its own studies,said it expects the environmental impact of constructing the glacier walk to be "minimal."

An educational experience

Hannan said the trail will give visitors an educational experience and allow them to truly engage in a landscape that is a "unique world wonder."

"We're very proud of this opportunity to bring a new experience to Canada's national parks and we're very proud of the environmental assessment process that we went through because we think we took a lot of time, effort and really did a fantastic job," he said.

Hannan wouldn't disclose the cost of the project, but said visitors can expect to pay an admission fee of between $15 and $29.

Because Jasper Park is a national park, it wasup to the federal government to give a green light to the project.

Parks Canada has saidtheproposal is consistent with land use zoning provisions for the park, it doesn't intrude into the lands managed as declared wilderness areas, and that it won'tinvolve"incremental development" such as newbuildings or transportation routes becauseBrewster already operates in the parkat the Icefield Centre.

It also said its consideration of the Glacier Discovery Walk does not signal a change in its policies on commercial development.

Kent defended the project against the criticisms, saying there are already commercial operations within national parks and that Parks Canada is fully meeting its mandate. He also said the new tourist attraction will be built on an existing parking lot and that no species will be lost because of it.

"There's a balance that we've achieved and I think that when it's fully in place many of today's critics will become fans," he said.

The environmental assessment did identify some "mitigations" that will be addressed as the project moves into its final design and construction phases.

Greg Fenton, superintendent for Jasper National Park, said there are concerns about mountain goats being displaced during construction, but that the company said they areunlikely to materialize. Parks Canada plans to monitor wildlife to ensure it is not adversely affected by the glacier walk.

He also told the news conference that the public viewing areas along the parkway may get more visitors if people don't want to pay to use the viewing spot on the new trail, and upgrades to those facilities may be made as a result.