Total’s Joslyn mine approval triggers Tory calls for speedier review process – by Shawn McCarthy and Carrie Tait (Globe and Mail – December 9, 2011)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

OTTAWA AND CALGARY— The Harper government has approved Canada’s fifth oil sands mine after the project spent six years under regulatory scrutiny, prompting a senior cabinet minister and energy executives to argue lengthy reviews are unacceptable.

France’s Total SA and its partners are now free to build their proposed Joslyn North strip mine after Joe Oliver, the federal Natural Resources Minister, gave Ottawa’s blessing Thursday, while pushing for regulatory reforms.

Mr. Oliver said the approval process for projects like the Joslyn North effort should take no more than two years. His comments, made in Ottawa, come as global leaders struggle to hammer out a new climate change treaty in South Africa. Mr. Oliver’s push to speed up the approval process will further fuel criticism of Canada’s oil sands industry, which is expected to double production by 2020 to three million barrels of crude per day.

Alberta spits out 40 per cent of the country’s carbon dioxide emissions, with oil sands and coal projects representing the largest chunk of the province’s emissions. Oil sands mining efforts, while layered with environmental challenges, produce less carbon dioxide than drilling projects.

“The Joslyn project is a telling example for the need for a more efficient and effective regulatory system,” Mr. Oliver told reporters. “It is crystal clear that we need to put an end to unreasonable delays – delays that can jeopardize the viability of projects like Joslyn and harm our reputation as an attractive place to do business.”

Jean-Michel Gires, the head of Total’s Canadian operations, said that while the company is pleased approval came through, the six-year process tested Total’s patience.

“Having to explain to [Total’s] headquarters what is the process we have to go through and why do we need to go through a six-year process is quite difficult,” Mr. Gires said in an interview. “But nevertheless, we did survive.”

For the rest of this article, please go to the Globe and Mail website: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/totals-joslyn-mine-approval-triggers-tory-calls-for-speedier-review-process/article2264706/