Good afternoon, everybody.
My name is Grant Sullivan. I'm the director of energy for the Nihtat Corporation. In the north we wear multiple hats, so I'm also on the Gwich’in Council International, but I'll be representing the Nihtat Corporation today.
I'd like to thank the committee for inviting me here today.
I am from Inuvik, Northwest Territories, a community of 3,200 people on the Mackenzie delta 200 kilometres north of the Arctic Circle, where the sun does not shine for 30 days a year but glows for two months straight in the summer.
My comments today will relate to the Nihtat Gwich'in experience with energy projects in the Inuvik region.
The Nihtat Corporation is wholly owned by the Nihtat Gwich'in Council located in Inuvik, Northwest Territories, with the Gwich'in settlement area. The Nihtat Gwich'in is one of the four designated Gwich'in organizations established under the Gwich'in Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement, one of the modern land claim agreements that exchange undefined aboriginal rights for defined treaty rights.
The Nihtat Gwich'in are landowners and rights holders, and well as decision-makers for our lands. We believe that sustainable economic development will come through homegrown solutions by people who know our communities and who know how to adapt projects and ideas to our local circumstances so that they are achievable and enduring.
The mandate of the Nihtat Corporation is to enhance the quality of life of Gwich'in participants through the creation of and participation in meaningful economic opportunities in a sustainable and responsible environment.
My remarks today will focus on suggestions for best practices that come from my practical experience as an indigenous business person leading projects in, and on behalf of, my community.
In my view, existing approaches to project development need to be expanded to accommodate evolving views and perspectives regarding consultation, engagement and investment, and to remove existing roadblocks to indigenous participation and investment.
There is growing recognition today that the environment for doing business with indigenous peoples must evolve beyond simple community engagement undertaken during project planning to include consideration of, first, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the principle of free, prior and informed consent; and second, the Truth and Reconciliation calls to action.
Call to action 92 calls for corporate sector commitment “to meaningful consultation, building respectful relationships, and obtaining the free, prior, and informed consent of Indigenous peoples before proceeding with economic development projects.”
I will offer two broad recommendations today on the path forward, based on my experience with energy projects in Inuvik.
My first recommendation is to shift focus from externally driven major projects to empowering indigenous communities to develop energy projects that reflect community values and provide long-term benefits to the community.
At this time there are no large-scale energy projects being planned in Inuvik or in the wider Gwich'in settlement area. However, the community has significant past experience related to the failed development of the Mackenzie Valley pipeline project. This experience and the experience with the Inuvik high point wind project underline the need for a new approach to development going forward that is community driven as opposed to being externally driven.
After discussing each of these briefly, I would like to tell you about a new approach taken by the Nihtat toward planning and development of renewable generation in our community.
The experience with the Mackenzie Valley pipeline highlights shortcomings inherent in relying on large international companies to drive development in our communities.
The pipeline was originally proposed in the early 1970s, six years before I was born, but has yet to be built today.
The participants in the pipeline were some of the largest oil and gas companies in the world, such as ConocoPhillips, Shell, Imperial Oil and ExxonMobil. When the project was rebooted in the 1990s, it also included a provision for 33% ownership by the Gwich'in, Sahtu and Inuvialuit people.
The decision to permit the pipeline in the 1970s was delayed by the Berger inquiry. Later efforts to resurrect the pipeline also failed.
In December 2017, it was announced that the conglomerate developing the pipeline would dissolve and the pipeline, with an estimated cost of $16 billion, would not be built. After this announcement, the local community was left to figure out how to pick up the pieces and carry on.
This experience taught me that in order to succeed, energy projects need to start with and be driven by the community. This helps ensure that projects are planned in a manner that aligns with the community's interests and needs.
The Inuvik high point wind project is currently being planned and developed by the Government of the Northwest Territories and the Northwest Territories Power Corporation within the Gwich'in settlement area. Here we have a small, local renewable project planned to displace fossil fuel generated on an isolated remote grid.
Two stages of the feasibility assessment were taken between 2016 and 2018 as part of the planning for this project. For each feasibility assessment, a competitive tender was issued, and in each case the Nihtat, partnering with other consulting firms, bid on the work and won. This allowed the Nihtat to have active involvement in the project planning and development, and in my view, the Government of Northwest Territories and the Northwest Territories Power Corporation benefited from our local knowledge and insight into the project.
Being involved in the project planning in this manner was critical to our understanding of the project and planning for the local electrical grid. While a two- to four-megawatt wind project is small by most standards, it would be a big deal for this community and our local grid. However, while the Nihtat were keenly interested in advancing the project, there was no long-term Government of Northwest Territories or NTPC strategy to ensure an ongoing role for the Nihtat or for the community, beyond project development and construction.
As announced on November 13, 2018, the $40 million of funding needed to proceed with this wind project has been committed by Canada and the Northwest Territories government. The project is currently poised to proceed.
An investment opportunity was proposed by the Government of Northwest Territories for the local Gwich'in; however, the terms offered by the GNWT provided negligible, if any, benefits for the community and were not reasonable, attractive or acceptable to us. Failure to resolve this one key requirement is the only obstacle today preventing this very worthwhile local project from proceeding.
The Nihtat Corporation is advancing a number of small renewable energy projects at this time that are driven by local interest and needs, and will build local capacity and develop long-term revenue streams for the community from renewables. I would like to take a few minutes to highlight some of these developments.
With funding support from the northern REACHE program, initial studies were taken to understand the cost of fossil fuel generation in Inuvik and the other Beaufort delta communities. With further funding, support was translated into a broader study related to understanding potential fossil fuel uses, costs and greenhouse gas emissions by sector for the Beaufort delta communities, as well as an assessment of options to reduce fossil fuels uses.
The Nihtat began to look seriously at options for solar development in Inuvik. With funding through CERRC and CanNor, the Nihtat is pursuing a number of smaller renewable projects focused on reducing fossil fuels in Inuvik. These are locally driven and owned, and will provide long-term business opportunities and revenue stream for the Nihtat.
Developments currently in the planning stage and planned to be completed this summer, 2019, include ground-mounted solar installations for two commercial properties and the installation of solar panels on the rooftops of 32 residential homes. These are exciting opportunities for the Nihtat and for the community.
My second recommendation is that long-lived capital investments should provide the opportunity for project benefits and community involvement that extend beyond project planning and construction. This may include equity ownership, partnership and having indigenous proponents.
Impact and benefit agreements and favourable procurement practices have a role in creating indigenous business opportunities; however, these are short-term measures that tend to focus on planning and construction. These measures often do not provide the long-term opportunities or involvement that the communities are seeking.
In our Inuvik region, for example, the structure of how federal investments are flowed through the territorial government has become a major impediment to indigenous development. This has been experienced by the Nihtat Corporation. In our experience, restrictive conditions are added at the territorial level that result in the indigenous organization having less leeway to negotiate favourable contracts.
We see policy objectives for renewables to displace existing fossil fuel heating in our regional GNWT buildings, but to date there has been no effective Government of Northwest Territories policy established to work together successfully with indigenous investment on these projects.
The Government of Northwest Territories' energy strategy lays out two paths for community participation in renewable electrical generation.
The first one is that the community invests in its own electrical project with payments from the electrical utility based on the value of diesel fuel displaced by the renewable. The second is that the community or indigenous government provide debt financing for the government or the Northwest Territories Power Corporation with payments at a low-risk return, consistent with the investment terms of the GNWT. However, we see renewable electricity caps and other GNWT and Northwest Territories Power Corporation conditions that effectively limit the future development of renewables in Inuvik. Despite an increasingly favourable investment climate, indigenous-owned corporations do not have access to financing at the same rate that the Government of the Northwest Territories does.