A NEW report co-authored by Water Matters Society of Alberta and The Pembina
Institute is now available!
Curing Environmental Dis-Integration: A Prescription for Integrating the Government of
Alberta's Strategic Initiatives
By Danielle Droitsch, Steven A. Kennett, Dan Woynillowicz
The Government of Alberta lacks the regulatory ability to manage the cumulative
environmental impacts of the industrial development and other human activities
now occurring across Alberta's landscapes. A new approach to environmental
decision-making is needed to avoid continued decline in key indicators of
environmental quality and depletion of Alberta's natural capital.
A series of strategic government initiatives launched in response to growing
environmental concerns clearly signal that Alberta's existing decision-making
processes need more than a simple fine-tuning in order to address current
environmental challenges. The Water for Life strategy, the first of these
government initiatives, was launched in 2003 in response to growing evidence of
the need to plan for secure water supplies and to manage the encroaching
impacts on Alberta's watersheds. The Land-Use Framework initiative is also
presented as a call to action in light of growing land-use pressures and
cumulative effects. A third initiative, Alberta Environment's proposed regulatory
framework for managing cumulative effects, describes the "need for action" in
terms of significant risks to the environment and to the economy. The same
types of concerns are behind the government's clean air and energy strategies
that are also under development. This report argues that the Alberta
government's inability to manage cumulative impacts can be traced to the lack
of integration in decision-making.
This report identifies the symptoms of the problem, provides the diagnosis,
and concludes that the solution to this problem is the convergence of the
government's strategic initiatives around a single system of integrated
regional planning for Alberta.
Download the report