Proposed fracking regulations no relief to opponents - Action News
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New Brunswick

Proposed fracking regulations no relief to opponents

An opponent of fracking in the small community of Taymouth said he won't be sleeping easier following the announcement of the government's proposed changes to the shale gas industry.

New Brunswick government proposing 116 changes to shale gas industry regulations

Jim Emberger reads proposed changes to the shale gas industry in his home in Taymouth, N.B. (CBC)

An opponent of fracking in the small community of Taymouth said he wont be sleeping easier following the announcement of the governments proposed changes to the shale gas industry.

"Its impossible to regulate this to the point where it can be done safely," said Jim Emberger.

The province announced 116 proposed changes to the fracking industry Thursday. The changes will set out strict rules on protecting the environment while overhauling the framework that would ensure more money flows into the provincial coffers.

Once they're made law, the province said it will have some of the toughest fracking regulations in North America

Memramcook, N.B. became the first Francophone community to vote for a moratorium on fracking. (CBC)

But Emberger says with new revelations about hydraulic fracturing continually coming out, by the time the new laws come into effect, they'll be outdated.

"A year ago when I first was in this, geologists were saying, 'No problem, earthquakes won't be a consideration'. Well then they had lots of earthquakes in the United States and elsewhere, in Canada and England, and they said, 'Ok, you can have earthquakes, but they weren't actually caused by the fracking, but by the deep injection wells where they put the fracking fluid when they're done," he said.

"So this is just the nature of all this, is the great unknown? And how do you write regulations for the great unknown?"

In Memramcook, plumber Walter Belliveau said if the government doesnt stop fracking companies from coming in, hell vote the government out.

Belliveau believes no matter what the regulations, citizens dont win when they go up against big companies.

Emberger agrees.

"Anything they come up with wont be adequate for the job, and they wont have the personnel to enforce it," he said. "All the other problems, industry will get around it. Theyll just pay the fines, and loopholes, and get permits to do what they want."