MONTREAL – A former director general of Parks Canada has written a letter to Premier Philippe Couillard expressing concern that his government is backtracking on a major commitment in the development of northern Quebec.
The government had previously stated that 50 per cent of the land covered by what is called the Plan nord— or northern plan — would be protected from industrial activity. Nikita Lopoukhine, president emeritus of the World Commission on Protected Areas, has asked Couillard to clarify recents reports that government policy had changed.
He said he had learned from a provincial organization attending a panel last week that the new policy was to “implement conservation measures on 50 per cent of the Plan nord territory, including 20 per cent that would be protected areas.”
Lopoukhine said in his letter, dated Nov. 3, that he wants to make sure the government is not pulling back on its previous commitment of 50 per cent.
“I believe this substitution could be interpreted to mean that mining, forestry and energy projects could be included in the 50 per cent and (I think) that is not compatible with the vision expressed in the Plan nord,” he wrote in his letter.
A spokesman for Couillard said in an email Thursday a response to the letter would come at a later date.
For years, the Liberals have touted the Plan nord as a way to create thousands of jobs through energy development, mining and tourism in Quebec’s north, on an area about twice the size of France.
But the proposal, first unveiled in 2011, caught the attention of the international scientific community for its other key goal: to protect half of that boreal wilderness from industrial development.
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