Environmental Assessment as a Tool for Managing Impacts on Wetlands: Understanding Current Practice in the Mining Sector
Date
2023-12-19
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ORCID
0009-0002-7632-3730
Type
Thesis
Degree Level
Masters
Abstract
Wetlands are ecologically rich lands but also heavily impacted. Canada has a large mining sector, with operations impacting the important functions provided by wetlands that benefit humans. Environmental assessment (EA) is the primary regulatory tool for mitigating the impacts of development, including mining, to wetlands. Many jurisdictions in Canada use a hierarchical approach to mitigate wetland loss through avoidance, minimization, restoration. Any remaining loss is offset through compensation as under current federal and provincial policies or protections, development activities should pose “no net loss” of wetland functions. Although the mining industry is an important natural resource sector in Canada, there is limited research on how the potential impacts of mining activity on wetlands are identified and managed through EA processes. In response, this research examined wetland impacts and mitigations in EA. Case studies of mining projects in British Columbia (BC) and Yukon (YT) were examined, as mining is particularly important to the economies of this province and territory, and often occurs in areas of high wetland density. The methodology consisted of an in-depth document analysis of mining project EAs. The results indicated that, in BC, the EA practice tends to default to wetland area as a proxy for wetland function and is the primary measure for assessing impacts to wetlands. There is strong focus on direct impacts, while insufficiently describing baseline wetland functions potentially impacted and to be mitigated. Hydrological and habitat wetland functions were prioritized when described in mitigation measures. In YT, the reviewed EAs contain no information on the impacted wetland area, wetland class, or wetland functions, nor provide information on how the proposed mitigation measures would address potentially impacted wetland functions. The often-poor linkages between proposed wetland mitigation measures and identified project impacts found in this research were attributed to inadequate wetland policies and regulations for mitigating impacts, and poor EA practices to address and mitigate wetland impacts effectively. An exploration of mitigation practices across jurisdictions exposes inconsistencies within the implementation of the mitigation hierarchy, with a focus on minimization in BC and restoration in YT. Compensations approaches, only identified in BC, were creation, enhancement, and off-site restoration. While wetland loss in YT is inconclusive due to information gaps, the EA practice in BC suggests that the mitigation hierarchy is not fully applied, and the province is therefore likely moving toward a net wetland loss. Understanding and addressing the issues highlighted by this thesis will be important to advancing the effectiveness of EA to manage the impacts of mining activities on wetlands.
Description
Keywords
Environmental assessment, wetlands, mitigation hierarchy
Citation
Degree
Master of Science (M.Sc.)
Department
Geography and Planning
Program
Geography