Study warns Alberta has failed to consider damage to foothills from coal mining
New coal mines in Alberta’s Rocky Mountain foothills would create more environmental problems than economic benefits, a lengthy new study has concluded.
“The best available information indicates that the magnitude of long-term liabilities to water resources … are likely to exceed any short-term economic benefits,” says the report from the Alces Group, an ecological consulting firm.
Alces, hired by landowners near where coal mines are being explored, says current methods to remove toxins such as selenium from water flowing over mine sites are unproven over long periods of time and large areas. It says new mines would increase stress on water supplies, especially as southern Alberta’s population grows and climate change alters rain and snow patterns.
It estimates new mines will only be one-quarter reclaimed within 50 years. Even reclaimed, those sites aren’t likely to return to what they were.


