Is George Smitherman Familiar With the Environment?
While both Premier McGuinty and Minister Smitherman have softened their ‘absurd’ rhetoric since unleashing a very public backlash on themselves across the Province, Minister Smitherman still doesn’t seem to get it. They’ve backed down from flinging insults at Scarborough residents, but still don’t seem prepared to recognize the environmental concerns Scarborough’s residents have.
Smitherman’s latest comments represent the fundamental lack of understanding the Premier and he seem to have regarding Scarborough’s concerns. It’s not about our homes, it’s about preserving the environment from untold degradation. Perhaps if either of them or their staff cared to read or reply to a single letter Guildwood residents sent them before dismissing us as ‘NIMBY’ they would know this.
Smitherman again took aim at opponents of a proposed Toronto Hydro project to put a string of wind turbines in Lake Ontario two to four kilometres off the Scarborough Bluffs, saying they are far enough away from homes not to be “impactful.”
“People are raising questions,” he said in a nod to area residents concerned about the impact turbines could have on human health, migratory birds and other natural concerns.
“We have done a lot of work looking at the evidence … we’re always reviewing the literature,” Smitherman added, suggesting polluted air from coal-fired electricity plants poses health dangers that outweigh concerns about wind turbines. Toronto Star, February 20th 2009
It is important that the Minister is now prepared to recognize there is a human health impact worth considering, but why can’t he recognize there is an environmental impact too?
This isn’t a balancing act. The environment should never be a balancing act. I get for political reasons comparing wind to coal makes for a decent talking point, but it isn’t a coal power plant that currently has the potential to release harmful substances into Toronto’s drinking water, cause untold damage to the shoreline or to bird, bat and fish populations. It is a wind turbine project that will not require a single ‘iota’ of provincial environmental review whatsoever. Nothing. Once they have the anemometer application from Natural Resources as far as the Government is concerned it’s officially ‘go time’. (You could already suggest the Government has decided it is ‘go’ time, considering Toronto Hydro Energy Services has stalled their application and the Premier and his Deputy have already come out swinging in favour of the application they have yet to received.)
Can Smitherman seriously ignore the fact that the proposal calls for the installation of 18 000 tonnes of massive structures in the lake, stirring up all kinds of unstudied lake bed sediment upstream from where 45% of Toronto’s water is sucked out of the lake? All of this disturbed debris, like the sand that created the Beach and the Toronto Islands will naturally drift towards the waterworks, where it has the potential to get sucked into the City’s fresh water supply. There will be no environmental review first so we won’t even know what we’re sending down current. Although should it be a problem, the good people at Toronto Water will tell us about it when the release their annual report monitoring the dozens of contaminants in our water they monitor.
As for his coal reference, at least to me it appears the Minister is giving folks the choice between getting their toxic Mercury fix between the air we breathe and the water Toronto drinks. Lake Ontario’s fish are inedible due to high mercury levels, and like other heavy metals that don’t dissolve in water they concentrate in lake bed sediment on the bottom with other harmful materials like PCBs. Construction will undoubtedly displace massive amounts of lake bed sediment.
Smitherman appears ready to ignore the fact that the Scarborough Bluffs is the most sensitive portion of shoreline anywhere on Lake Ontario and this project if ‘forced’ (the Premier’s word) on the community would be the world’s closest project of it’s size. Most European countries say one needs a minimum distance from shore of 5KM for nature conservation reasons. Germany thinks 20KM is necessary. Greenpeace Europe agrees that offshore plants need to respect this minimum distance, European wind energy associations do too. They also acknowledge the importance of full environmental assessments. So why can’t Minister Smitherman and Joyce McLean (the past President of Canada’s Wind Energy Association) take the advice of Denmark, Germany, Greenpeace Europe (McLean is also the former Greenpeace Canada Chairperson, and a former Great Lakes Campaigner for Greenpeace), and the wind industry. Do they seriously believe that they know something that the industry, governments and environmental lobby in Europe don’t?
Joyce McLean has no credibility left on this after the series of misleading statements, dirty tricks, and a demonstrated inability to appreciate any of the environmental, viability or economic concerns residents have put forth. (Once again, I am fully prepared to back up this claim if challenged.) Does the Minister really want to cast his lot in with her and hope for a different outcome?
In it’s current form this bill is not a “green” anything. It’s a fraud of a bill. It is bill cloaked in a label, written by industry insiders with a vested financial interest, introduced by a guy whose chosen to attack folks who object to the fact that not a single Provincial environmental review of any sort is required to construct 60 objects as tall as the Royal York with each weighing the equivalent of 6 subway cars each and anchored up to 90 metres deep on an unstudied sand bar. It is madness that the Province believes no environmental study whatsoever is required.
If he is serious about passing a true Green Energy Act he would recognize that set backs are necessary for environmental protection as well. He would recognize that there is a legitimate need to do a thorough environmental assessment before approving any project that has the potential to release heavy metals and PCBs into Toronto’s drinking water or have any negative environmental impact. He needs to recognize that the Scarborough Bluffs are unstable by their nature, and the construction and heavy pounding that is required to anchor a wind turbine 90 metres into a sandbar could cause erosion and further destabilize the cliffs. He needs to recognize that provincial legislation exempts wind projects from any environmental review. The provincial government just doesn’t care what kind of impact these things have.
I’m not an expert. But based on the current legislation, this blog and my attempt to use other studies and data to educate my audience, is the closest thing to an environmental study that will come out of this proposed project if Minister Smitherman doesn’t find the guts to tell the wind industry that they too need to follow the rules and actually care about the environmental impact their projects have.
The Premier and the Minister need to wake up before they risk damaging the amazing shoreline that is the Scarborough Bluffs because they were either too stubborn to admit they are wrong or not strong enough to stand up and show the leadership needed to protect the cliffs from a moneyed interest that doesn’t appear to care. They need to ask themselves before Monday when they introduce the bill why they wouldn’t want to adopt well recognized international standards for shoreline nature conservation and why the Scarborough Bluffs, which are far more delicate than other shorelines in the world, needs to have literally the closest project of it’s size anywhere in the world? And if so, why does it need to be the closest project of it’s kind in the world and the only one without any environmental review?
Finally – if anyone in a position of responsibility wants to contact me in either the Premier’s office or the Minister’s Office to discuss internationally recognized shoreline set backs for all offshore wind projects, or internationally recognized full environmental reviews, I would be more than happy to share this and can be reached at john.laforet@laforet.ca anytime today or over the weekend.
Tags: Anemometer Study, Dalton McGuinty, Environmental Impacts of wind power, George Smitherman, Guildwood, Joyce McLean, Lake Bed Sediment, Lake Ontario, Lake Ontario Wind Farm, Minister of Energy and Infrastructure, NIMBY, Ontario Wind Energy, Scarborough Bluffs, Scarborough Bluffs Wind Farm, Shoreline Set Backs, The Green Energy Act, Toronto Drinking Water Contamination, Toronto Hydro Wind Farm, Wind Farm Environmental Assessment


February 20th, 2009 at 12:08 pm
How on earth can Smitherman claim that this windfarm will not be “impactful” on residents if no environmental impact study has been done? Is he going to offer to spend some time in a turbine residence just as he offered last year as Health Minister to wear an incontinence diaper to test their absorbency? Also, you raise an important point regarding the geological instability of the Scarborough Bluffs given the possible long term effects of turbine vibrations and sediment displacement on erosion. There are a lot of questions to be raised and answered before, not after, this project is approved.
February 20th, 2009 at 1:59 pm
McGuinty and Smitherman are not in charge….CanWEA is. The Ontario government is taking all their direction and information from them, and them only.
You’re right about the closest thing to an environmental assessment would be that Gerretsen/Smitherman finds the balls to tell the wind companies they too must follow the rules.
February 20th, 2009 at 5:52 pm
“We have done a lot of work looking at the evidence … we’re always reviewing the literature,” Smitherman added.
Yeah, right. When a politician says they’ve done a lot of work, that’s politico-speak for they’ve done squat.
February 20th, 2009 at 8:20 pm
If McGuinty & Smitherman allow this fiasco to proceed without due diligence and the result is disasterous, who gets to clean up the mess? They won’t be in office when the really hard work is left to the good citizens of Toronto.
February 20th, 2009 at 9:57 pm
It is totally irresponsible for him to justify improper placement of windmills because of the coal plant pollution. He should resign. The whole government has been irresponsible by not cleaning up the coal plants as Germany and Denmark have done.
On another point, they have gone mad with the climate change agenda. This quote was in the Sarnia Observer:
“The dire need to stop global warming with an aggressive renewable energy plan for Ontario outstrips potential damage to sensitive environmental areas, says Marion Fraser, a founding member of the Green Energy Act Alliance.”
February 21st, 2009 at 12:18 am
The quote from Marion Fraser is mind-blowing and totally illogical. Stop global warming to save the environment by destroying the environment? If environmental damage is sanctioned under the Green Energy Act, then the whole purpose of the Act would be defeated, would it not?
February 21st, 2009 at 9:14 pm
I posted a comment at the Star concerning this article and got voted down 5-0. What a huge honour. It is amazing how people will vote against the truth.
http://www.thestar.com/News/Canada/article/590474
“He’s Playing Politics With Our Health
Again, Smitherman is playing politics justifying improper placement of windmills by saying it’s better than the air pollution from the coal plants. He should read the Coal Cost Benefit Analysis that shows that the impact of our coal plants is minimal because of all the other sources of pollution. Notwithstanding, they should have been cleaned up long ago as they have done in Germany and Denmark, who also happen to be leaders in wind energy. In no way does pollution from the coal plants justify damaging people’s health by placing windmills too close to their homes. He should resign.”
May 13th, 2009 at 1:16 am
[...] staff created an interesting post today on Is George Smitherman Familiar With the Environment?Here’s a short outlineGermany, Greenpeace Europe (McLean is also the former Greenpeace Canada Chairperson, and a former Great Lakes Campaigner for Greenpeace), and… [...]
June 12th, 2009 at 5:17 am
For the most part, I agree with what you are stating here.
June 22nd, 2009 at 1:04 am
I was searching for something like this the other day.