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‘Ridiculously small’ Imperial Oil fine sends wrong message to industry: Indigenous leaders

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Heavy oil upgrading facilities at the Kearl Lake oil sands project, north of Fort McMurray. Photo courtesy of Imperial Oil

The Alberta Energy Regulator’s decision to issue a “ridiculously small” $50,000 fine to Imperial Oil in connection with major tailings leaks in 2023 sends a clear message to fossil fuel companies according to a local First Nation’s chief: “come here and dump all of your toxic waste in our drinking water.”

“The AER could have given them a stiffer fine, maybe $5 million to $10 million, to send a message to all of industry that they will not tolerate this. But they didn’t do anything,” Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation Chief Allan Adam told Canada’s National Observer in a phone interview on Friday.

Imperial Oil made roughly $20 billion in profit over 2022 and 2023 combined, and reported $1.13 billion in profit in the second quarter of 2024.

“That $50,000, I think Imperial makes that in probably three seconds,” Adam said. (Adam is not far off in the 2023/24 fiscal year the company made $50,000 in about 40 seconds.)

ACFN is suing the Alberta Energy Regulator for failure to notify the nation about two large leaks of toxic tailings from Imperial Oil’s Kearl site in northern Alberta. Adam has been at the forefront of the issue ever since the tailings leaks made international headlines last year.

“This ridiculously small fine shows that Alberta, with its weak regulations, is the problem,” he said.

ACFN is not the only community saying the AER didn’t go far enough.

“We feel that this penalty falls short of sending a strong and clear message to the oilsands industry regarding the imperative of accountability in environmental stewardship,” said Fort Chipewyan Metis Nation President Kendrick Cardinal in an emailed statement to Canada’s National Observer.

“The actions of industry players have far-reaching consequences that extend beyond immediate financial penalties they impact our nation, and our Aboriginal rights,” Cardinal said, adding that the $50,000 fine should be the first step towards more rigorous enforcement by the regulator to ensure all industry participants adhere strictly to their regulatory responsibilities.

“It is crucial to recognize that the true ramifications of this incident may not become apparent for years to come,” Cardinal wrote.

When it first came to light in February 2023 that toxic tailings had been seeping from Imperial Oil’s Kearl site for nine months, local Indigenous communities were concerned and fearful that members had been harvesting and subsisting off the land without being notified. A lot of people in the community are “pissed off about it,” Adam added — himself included.

In the aftermath, Indigenous leaders including Adam criticized Alberta’s regulatory regime and lambasted the Alberta Energy Regulator for failing to protect people and the environment, calling it a captured regulator.

“Everybody says that the Alberta government will let industry do whatever they want, because they turned a blind eye and nobody wants to say anything about it, but it’s happened to our people,” Adam said.

“It’s chemical germ warfare … It’s a silent killer that’s killing our people,” he said, referring to the imminent threat posed by — and poor management of — more than 1.4 trillion litres of toxic oilsands tailings perched in man-made ponds near the Athabasca River.

(Mikisew Cree First Nation, which has also spoken out about the Kearl tailings leaks, did not respond to a request for comment by deadline. This story will be updated if and when comment becomes available.)

The federal government announced $12.5 million this month for a community-led study into the cumulative health impacts of the oilsands. For many years, ACFN and other groups had been raising the alarm on rare cancers found in the community and called for studies into the causes.

The Athabasca Chipewyan are bringing the tailings fight to the courts and in March served the AER president and CEO Laurie Pushor with a notice of a lawsuit.

“We’ll take this and we will submit this as evidence that the Alberta government doesn’t care about our people,” Adam said. “Everything that they do from here on in this just goes to the record to show their negligence towards our community … environmental racism is what it is.”

Adam hinted that the ACFN may continue to escalate the issue.

“We keep on talking to Alberta and Canada it goes nowhere,” Adam said. “We’ll take our message to the UN and we will tell the world about how this province of Alberta and Canada continues to treat our First Nations people here, because they tell everybody that the First Nations are doing good and there’s nothing wrong. Well, here we are dealing with this kind of crap, and it has to be addressed.”

—By Natasha Bulowski, Local Journalism Initiative reporter, Canada’s National Observer