ARCHIVED – Meeting Summary – 28 January 2011
This page has been archived on the Web
Information identified as archived is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please contact us to request a format other than those available.
Arctic Offshore Drilling Review
Meeting Summary
Date | Location |
---|---|
Friday 28 January 2011 9:03 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. |
Inuvialuit Development Corporation Building |
Purpose: Introduce the Arctic Offshore Drilling Review to the Inuvialuit Environmental Impact Review Screening Committee (EISC)
Participants | |
---|---|
John Ondrack | Chair |
John Ryder | Vice-Chair, Canada – Yukon Member (on Phone) |
Johnny Lennie | Canada Member |
Albert Ruben | Canada – Northwest Territories Member |
Eric Cockney | Inuvialuit Member |
Patrick Gruben | Inuvialuit Member |
Gaétan Caron | Chair and Chief Executive Officer, NEB |
David Hamilton | Member, NEB |
Bharat Dixit | Technical Leader Leader, Conservation of Resources, NEB |
Pamela Romanchuk | Environmental Specialist, NEB |
Introductory Remarks:
- An overview of the Arctic Offshore Drilling Review was provided, including the mandate of the NEB, the events leading up to the Review and the various phases of the Review.
- The EISC was asked "what questions do you need answers to prior to the NEB considering an application for offshore drilling?"
Dialogue with EISC members:
In response to the question put forward, a number of areas of interest and concern were raised by EISC members, including:
- Community Meetings:
- Could the NEB alleviate community fears regarding possible oil spill
- NEB having joint meetings with the Hunters and Trappers Committees and with the Community Corporations people at the same time in each community is a good thing as it is a unifying influence instead of a 'divide-and-conquer' approach used by others at previous community meetings.
- The EISC indicated the processes in the ISR divides people because of the perspective of different interest groups. There is no means to have a common discussion in the IFA.
- General:
- Monitoring and follow-up is critical
- Some concern was expressed that Marine Mammal Observers (MMO) could be fired if they reported violations
- NEB as a visible face of the regulator for oil and gas activities is important
- Stressed importance of infrastructure in the Beaufort Sea and Mackenzie Delta to deal with a potential of an oil spill from an offshore oil and gas program
- Good that people have names and faces. Provides a level of comfort. Keep the lines of communication open.
- Discussion around cumulative effects and where to draw the line.
- People world-wide are watching what is being considered for the Beaufort Sea
Concluding Remarks:
- Parties thanked each other for making the time to share information on the Arctic Offshore Drilling Review.
- Date modified: