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Oilfield Approval Off Newfoundland Coast Would Undercut Climate Commitments, Harm Biodiversity, Experts Warn

Anxiety is running high in Newfoundland and Labrador as the province waits on a federal decision about a proposed offshore oil project about 500 kilometres east of St. John’s.

Equinor’s Bay du Nord project would open a fifth oilfield for the cash-strapped province, whose oil sector was hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic and crashing global prices, The Canadian Press reports. But there is mounting concern an approval from Ottawa would undermine federal climate commitments and send a message to other provinces that oil and gas is a viable industry on which they can hook their financial hopes.

“If we’re going to be serious about our net-zero commitment and our international commitments, then we cannot approve any new oil and gas projects,” said Debora VanNijnatten, a public policy expert and associate political science professor at Wilfrid Laurier University.

“And we have to have a plan to help those regions that we say ‘no’ to,” she added in a recent interview.

Oil accounted for nearly 21% of Newfoundland and Labrador’s GDP in 2019, according to its latest budget, which also forecasted a deficit of C$826 million and a net debt of $17.2 billion. With an estimated 800 million recoverable barrels of oil in the proposed Bay du Nord site, the project is “critical to the Newfoundland and Labrador economy,” said a statement Thursday from Energy Minister Andrew Parsons.

Meanwhile, Canada has committed to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050 and to doing its part to limit global warming to 1.5°C. Bay du Nord is also among the first oil and gas projects to be considered for approval by the federal government since the International Energy Agency declared in May there can be no investment in new fossil fuel supply projects if the world is going to hit net-zero targets by 2050.

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Newfoundland’s oil ripple effect: As prices fall, commuting workers stay home

Newfoundland’s oil ripple effect: As prices fall, commuting workers stay home

The big paycheques from Alberta are drying up, and with them the economic good times

It was a tell-tale sign when East Coast Catering of St. John’s laid off 44 workers in September. The company supplies meals and housekeeping services to Newfoundland’s offshore oil rigs, two of which departed this year at the end of their contracts.


 

‘I am certainly not pushing the panic button, but I think we should have our hand hovering over it.’​– Radio host Paddy Daley


“The majority of our business is not directly impacted by the recent drop in oil prices,” East Coast Catering said, but the subtle signs of a downturn are there.

“I am not worried yet. And I am certainly not pushing the panic button, but I think we should have our hand hovering over it,” said Paddy Daley a well known call-in radio host for VOCM in St. John’s.

Newfoundland’s offshore oil industry has been somewhat insulated from the shock of plunging oil prices over the last 16 months, but the long tail of job losses and cancelled contracts so clearly evident in Alberta is beginning to show, especially as the province’s “turnaround workers” come home for good.

Darryl Day

Darryl Day worked in Alberta’s hydraulic fracturing industry. He was laid off in June, one of many Newfoundlanders who’ll no longer make the commute to the Alberta oil patch.

For years, thousands of Newfoundlanders commuted back and forth to Alberta’s oil patch, working three or four weeks at a time and bringing home plump paycheques. Many of them aren’t going back this fall.

Darryl Day used to fly from Gander to Alberta and back — 22 days out, 13 days back home. He was recruited at a job fair in Newfoundland six years ago to drive heavy machinery for a hydraulic fracturing company. Those were the “good times.”

“Different companies would run three or four job fairs in Newfoundland a week and they would leave with however many employees,” Day said. “Then if they ran short, they would come back again.”

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Olduvai II: Exodus
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