Calgary

Coal company asks court to quash order for federal review of Alberta mine expansion

A coal company is asking Federal Court today to toss out a decision by Canada's environment minister that a proposed Alberta mine expansion should get a full federal environmental review.

Coalspur Mines wants to enlarge Vista mine near Hinton, Alta.

An open pit mine.
The existing Vista mine near Hinton is owned by the U.S. coal giant Cline Group and began shipping coal for export in May 2019. (Bighorn Mining)

A coal company is asking Federal Court today to toss out a decision by Canada's environment minister that a proposed Alberta mine expansion should get a full federal environmental review.

Coalspur Mines says the decision was based on an unfair assumption that two separate projects are related and should be considered together.

It says Jonathan Wilkinson's decision was unreasonable and should be quashed.

The environmental law firm Ecojustice is arguing that legislation gives the minister the power to consider the cumulative effects of otherwise unrelated projects.

It says Coalspur's plans far exceed the production threshold that triggers a federal review and comes very close to crossing the size threshold as well.

It says quashing the review would give companies a green light to split up future plans into smaller projects that would avoid a federal review, which is more extensive than a provincial counterpart.

If Coalspur's plans proceed, the Vista mine would become Canada's largest thermal coal mine.