B.C. coal mines’ economic impact overstated, thwarting environmental analysis: study
A new study based on three British Columbia coal mines says the economic benefits from the projects, used to justify their approval during the environmental review process, were “significantly overestimated.”
The report, authored by six scholars including Simon Fraser University professor Rosemary Collard and University of British Columbia professor Jessica Dempsey, concludes the province’s environmental impact assessment process did not protect wildlife habitat as intended.
The issue, Collard said in an interview, is that economic benefits had been used to offset or justify environmental downsides without rules requiring agencies or companies to track the projects’ actual effects.
The Mining Association of British Columbia said the information in the report is “outdated,” and the results do not portray the situation around mines and their economic impacts accurately.