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by Helena Preston
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The biggest part of the changes in the regulation was the new 2-year timeline to provide a Remedial Action Plan (RAP) after discovery of a release. Will you be complying moving into 2021?
Click here: Remediation Regulation 154/2009
As we near the 2-year anniversary, here are the 3 things you need to know that will impact assessing, managing, buying, selling or developing properties in Alberta…
1. If your release occurred and was reported prior to the regulation amendment the timelines do not apply.
The regulator may request progress and seek items as allowed normally under EPEA, but you are generally grandfathered in for existing contaminated sites in the system.
If you have not reported a historical release, then the 2-year timeline applies. For those unreported releases pre-2019, you will be out of compliance. Time to get your release reporting in and get a plan in place with the regulator to catch up.
2. You may have a few steps to go or several larger ones.
The biggest unknown moving forward is collecting the data to see what the next steps are or considering what is happening/could happen at the property.
3. Are you the “Responsible Person” for a historical release?
This can vary a tremendous amount and can depend on not only who was responsible at the time, but subsequent property transactions and assignment of liabilities. Your legal counsel should help you know where you may stand on different properties. The responsible person has a duty to report not only initial releases or discovery of contamination above Tier 1 levels (as a baseline early on), but also any new information on the release which could be found through later investigations. Property transactions should consider the status of that release reporting and where/who is the responsible party in the sequence towards RAP development.
Final thoughts
The 2-year timeframe can seem daunting for moving from release through to RAP completion. The regulators have expressed understanding that at the end of 2 years your RAP may still identify the work is not quite complete, but the interim progress/RAP will be needed. Getting full delineation and risks evaluated can be complex when dealing with off-site issues, 3rd party notifications/approvals, multiple rounds of assessment and completing the full conceptual site model enough to enable a RAP and/or risk management approach. A qualified environmental professional can help navigate your options and ensure the project progresses smoothly.
About Emma
Emma is a professional geologist with over 20 years experience in Alberta dealing with contaminated site assessment, conducting Tier 2 exclusions/modifications, remedial options analysis, remedial activities, regulatory consultation, conceptual site model development, hydrogeological investigations, and risk management planning/assessment, providing technical and management expertise for a variety of oil and gas, industry, real estate and government projects. Get in touch with Emma: ekirsh@slrconsulting.com or 780-490-7893
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