Good afternoon, Madam Chair and members of the environment standing committee. It's a pleasure to speak to you today about Bill C-69.
I am Jim Boucher, chief of the Fort McKay First Nation. With me are Dr. Alvaro Pinto and Tarlan Razzaghi, our legal counsel. They will help me answer questions that you may pose to me later.
It is my duty as chief of the Fort McKay First Nation to protect and advocate for the Cree and Dene people of our first nation and our cultural identity, values, traditions, and way of life. It is my job to ensure our constitutionally protected rights are recognized, respected, and upheld by Canada, other governments, and Canadians in general.
Fort McKay is located at the very centre of the oil sands in the Athabasca region in northeast Alberta. Our ancestors have lived in our traditional territory since time immemorial. For us, this is not merely a landscape or a location of exploitable resources. It is our home. It is sacred to us because it has provided the necessities of life: water, animals for food and clothing, and the materials for shelter.
Figure 1 on page 12 of our brief shows Fort McKay's traditional territory. In the 1970s, oil sands production was 250,000 barrels per day. Today it is 2.5 million barrels per day, a tenfold increase, the majority of that in the last two decades. Figures 2 and 3 on pages 13 and 14 show that growth, which has taken up 75% of our traditional territory through mineral leases awarded by the provincial Government of Alberta without proper consultation, which is shown in figure 4 on page 15.
Our sustainability department addresses scores of oil sands-related applications every year. We hire the best scientific experts available and blend that with our expert traditional knowledge to pursue what we view as sustainable development.
The United Nations' Brundtland commission defined sustainable development as “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”. Sustainable development means, of course, economic opportunity, but more important, it also means passing on our traditional lands and the traditional use of those lands to future generations, just as they were passed to us.
Bill C-69 affirms the federal government's commitment to nation-to-nation and government-to-government relationships that recognize our unique identity, rights, and traditions: the foundation for reconciliation. It has been easy for governments to talk about reconciliation, but more difficult to translate those words into action. I have yet to see a true example of reconciliation from this government. With its power and authority, we are perplexed to see Canada relinquish its fiduciary duty to first nations to assess and mitigate development impacts that adversely affect reserve lands and traditional territories, our first nations people, and our treaty rights to the lower orders of government.
Do not mistake me: Fort McKay is not opposed to oil sands development. We are, in fact, among the most proactive of first nations with respect to oil sands development. Working in the oil sands sector has brought to the first nation and its members opportunity, economic self-sufficiency, stability, and prosperity that are inaccessible to many first nations people across the country, but as I said earlier, Fort McKay is also surrounded by oil sands development that has increased 1,000% since the 1970s.
Working with industry to advance shared objectives requires mutual respect and an acknowledgement that section 35 grants to all first nations the right to continue a way of life. It also demands that we identify the full range of impacts to first nations and take action to mitigate and accommodate our concerns.
Our concerns with Bill C-69 relate to the expert panel recommended consensus-based decision-making process. Bill C-69 unfortunately does not reflect that recommendation. The bill does not require proponents, governments, and first nations to work together to ensure that impact assessments are meaningful or adequate with respect to first nations people or their lands, even though it defines “effects within federal jurisdiction” as any change to the environment that would impact the physical and cultural heritage, traditional land use, significant historical, archaeological, paleontological, or architectural features, and the health and social or economic conditions of Cree and Dene people. Bill C-69 cites transboundary effects but does not acknowledge that direct or indirect impacts on reserve lands arising from activity on provincial lands are, in effect, transboundary.
The oil sands developments that surround our reserve pose tremendous insufficiently regulated risks to our people. For example, existing tailings ponds contain 1.3 trillion litres of contaminated water, enough to fill an eight-lane Olympic swimming pool 11,000 kilometres long stretching from Ottawa to Beijing with 11,000 pools left over.
A tailings pond breach from any mine would devastate our homes and reserves. When approvals are granted, there is no longer any federal presence. In fact, in the mid 1990s, Canada effectively approved by default all future tailings ponds in anticipation of new treatment technologies that still have not arrived. Canada takes too little action with respect to tailings ponds. Canada must consider the life-cycle impacts of tailings ponds.
As another example, Environment Canada installed the most advanced mobile air quality monitoring station in the world at Fort McKay. Scientists chose Fort McKay for its unique exposure to intense industrial activity. Environment Canada conducts research on air quality features of national and international importance and releases its data to the public. However, action to protect reserve lands from airshed impacts is left to Alberta, which relies on embarrassingly outdated ambient air quality objectives that do not protect human health. After years of disappointment, the provincial regulator finally acknowledged frequent exceedance of provincial standards in 2016, but provincial action remains elusive.
Another example is For McKay's Moose Lake Reserves to the northwest of our community, which were set aside in 1915 to preserve our traditional way of life. These were expanded in 2004 when Canada settled our treaty land entitlement claim. To fulfill the promise made in Treaty 8, Canada must protect all reserve lands designated for the exclusive use of Cree and Dene people. Five years ago, Alberta approved a 260,000 barrel per day project on the border of those reserves, and the first phase of a 40,000 barrel per day project is in the provincial regulatory process. Other projects are in the planning stages. Fort McKay requested federal intervention, but Canada has done nothing to help us protect our Moose Lake Reserves.
Alberta exempts pilot projects of 12,000 barrels per day or less from impact assessments. Accordingly, many companies announce projects that begin with a 10,000 barrel per day pilot, which increase by 10,000 barrel per day increments, and so get away with completing no impact assessments at all. The federal government must recognize and act upon its fiduciary duty to protect first nations and Fort McKay's occupation, active use, and enjoyment of its reserve lands, including our traditional territory.
The act must enable our first nation to sit at the table with the federal and provincial governments and all project proponents to protect reserve lands and our people from the beginning.
I think I'm running out of time; therefore, I'm going to say that we made some recommendations, and I'll pass this over to you and leave myself open to your questions.