Canada, Alberta agree on caribou protection deal that gives them years to take action
EDMONTON — Canada and Alberta have signed a deal on caribou protection that gives them years to take action but could allow energy drilling to resume on some ranges.
“I’m very concerned that development is in the fast lane, caribou conservation is slow,” Carolyn Campbell of the Alberta Wilderness Association said Friday.
The deal gives the two governments up to five years to design and bring in range plans for some of Alberta’s most endangered herds, which rely heavily on remaining patches of undisturbed old-growth boreal forest. That same timeline applies to restoring habitat and to avoiding new disturbances.
The plan envisions self-sustaining herds on healthy habitat some time between 50 and 100 years from now.

