The Alberta government says it is developing rules that will shape the future of coal mining in the province, but certain notable projects remain exempt from the new plan.
In 2020, the province moved to scrap a 1976 policy that limited coal development in the Eastern Slopes region. That decision opened previously off-limits areas to potential development and led to sustained public opposition.
In response to the pushback, the government reinstated that policy in 2021 and launched Alberta’s Coal Policy Committee. That committee released its final report in December 2021, and Alberta Energy Minister Brian Jean said the plan was intended to address its recommendations.
“If coal mining is allowed, it will only be allowed to the highest possible standards,” Jean told reporters on Friday. “Alberta’s new standards for coal mining will be among the best in the world, and the best in Canada.”
Under what the government is calling the Alberta Coal Industry Modernization Initiative, the province said it would allow coal mining to take place if it met certain standards:
- No mountaintop removal mining would be allowed as a coal mining technique.
- No new open-pit coal mining would be allowed in the Eastern Slopes.
- New coal mining proposals would be required to use techniques which use “best water practices and prevent adding selenium into waterways.” New proposals will either need to be underground mines or use mining technologies such as highwall automated underground mining, the government said.
- Rules under the 1976 Coal Development Policy for national parks, provincial parks, wildland parks, wilderness areas, ecological reserves, and provincial recreation areas continue, the government said.
However, the new rules do not apply to what’s referred to as “advanced” coal projects. That includes the long-controversial Grassy Mountain project in southern Alberta.
The Alberta energy ministry has said Grassy Mountain project qualifies as an “advanced coal project” because a project summary and environmental impact assessment were filed with regulators several years ago.
The Municipal District of Ranchland, where the mine is located, has argued against the project moving ahead, and the Alberta Court of Appeal released a ruling in August stating it would hear arguments on the matter.
The government will engage with the coal industry to develop the regulations but won’t consult the general public again, citing engagement done under the Coal Policy Committee. A new coal policy will be developed by late 2025.
More to come.