August 22, 2003
Sanikiluaq left out
again?
Document on new Quebec
hydro project gives no say for Sanikiluaq
JANE
GEORGE
A Quebec government document
on the province's next major hydroelectric scheme may fuel a new dispute between
Quebec and Nunavut.
The document, which contains
rules for conducting environmental studies for the proposed Eastmain-Rupert
hydro project, ignores concerns expressed by Sanikiluaq residents, Nunavut Tunngavik
Inc., and the Government of Nunavut at public hearings held in Montreal and
northern Quebec last May.
The public hearings were
conducted by Quebec and various parties to the James Bay land claims agreement.
Directives contained in
the Quebec government document state environmental impact statements must look
at the "quality of life and health of the Crees," recognize "the
substantial and distinct knowledge" of the Crees, and be translated into
Cree.
But there's no mention
of Inuit or Nunavut anywhere.
The consultation process
was triggered by a Hydro-Québec proposal to build hydroelectric dams
across two rivers flowing into James Bay, south of Sanikiluaq.
Environmental studies will
have to look at "large" potential impacts such as marine currents
and ice dynamics in James Bay and Hudson Bay, and "any other element they
deem relevant for the environmental and social assessment of the project."
But they don't have to
include anything specific about Sanikiluaq - which sits on the Belcher Islands
in Hudson Bay, just north of James Bay.
"We know our concerns
are legitimate," spokesperson Moses Novalinga told the evaluation committee
at its May hearings.
Sanikiluaq's environment
committee wants Sanikiluaq to be acknowedged as a community that would be affected
by the project, and wants a say in all impact studies.
Sanikiluaq also asked for
the entire James Bay and Hudson Bay region to be studied.
Considerations of environmental
impacts on Sanikiluaq caused by hydro developments in Quebec don't have to be
included in any environmental impact statement.
"It's not explicit,"
admitted Robert Joly, from the northern industrial projects section within Quebec's
provincial environment department.
Joly said any environmental
statement would consider the "fundamental issues" at stake.
"If it's not sufficient,
they [the environmental review panels] can ask additional questions," he
said.
In the early 1990s, Sanikiluaq
opposed the damming of the Great Whale River for a massive hydroelectric project
because of concerns over the negative effect on water currents, ice and marine
life around the Belcher Islands. The flooding of land for hydroelectric projects
is also known to release mercury into the environment.
Sanikiluaq's position hasn't
changed. In a brief
prepared for last May's
hearings in Montreal, Sanikiluaq's local committee insisted it must be included
in any assessment of new projects that involve the damming of rivers to generate
electricity.
"Such potential significant
impacts, actual or perceived, threaten and can affect the ability of the people
of Sanikiluaq and Nunavut to feed themselves on country food," Sanikiluaq's
committee said in its brief this time around.
"In addition to destabilizing
the traditional economy, any adverse impacts in the coastal and offshore environments
may also affect the community's ability to build sustainable Nunavut enterprises
in eiderdown, shellfish, culture and tourism," the brief said.
The brief also said any
environmental impact statement should include the traditional knowledge of the
Inuit of Chisasibi, and touch on transboundary issues. Known as the "forgotten
Inuit," the Inuit of Chisasibi live within Cree territory.
"Decisions made in
Quebec, or in the interests of Quebec, with respect to strategic infrastructure
and hydroelectric development directly impact us. We are forced to live with
the consequences of those decisions and, subsequently, in the shadow of Quebec,"
Novalinga said.
NTI, which has responsibility
to ensure that Nunavut Inuit rights set out in the Nunavut land claims agreement
are upheld, also submitted a letter to the hearings, citing its "grave
concerns" about the project's effects on Sanikiluaq, the Hudson Bay region
and Nunavut.
NTI condemned the draft
for its narrowness and lack of "analysis of the potential effects of the
project outside of the provincial jurisdiction of Quebec."
It also asked for a longer
frame of reference in evaluating impacts - 30 years instead of 10.
But the final document
of directives doesn't reflect these recommendations. Instead, they focus solely
on Cree communities, Jamesians (non-native residents of the region) and the
population of Quebec.
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