Top court overturns oilsands mine approval over Aboriginal concerns for land
EDMONTON – Alberta’s highest court has overturned regulatory approvals for a $440-million oilsands mine that would have encroached on land a local First Nation considers sacred.
The Court of Appeal says the Alberta Energy Regulator’s refusal to consider concerns from the Fort McKay First Nation violated the honour of the Crown.
The band is surrounded on three sides by oilsands development and says the Moose Lake area in northern Alberta is the last place members can go to practice their traditional rights.
The band had been negotiating with the province for two decades over the area and thought it had a deal in 2018 for a 10-kilometre buffer.