Monthly water testing is part of a new “world class” federal-provincial environmental monitoring plot for the Alberta oilsands announced Friday in Edmonton.

The plot, which seeks to improve and increase the monitoring of water, air and habitat in the oilsands, will cost about $50 million a year to implement in its first three years, with industry picking up the cost.

Management of the new system will be shared by the federal and Alberta governments.

“Improvements are necessary if we want to have world-leading environmental monitoring in the oilsands,” said federal Environment Minister Peter Kent, who joined Alberta Environment and Water Minister Diana McQueen at the announcement in Edmonton on Friday.

“We need to match our commitment to environmentally responsible development with a world-class, comprehensive and transparent monitoring program.”

Work on the three-year implementation plot starts this spring. Results from the tests will be made public to allow for independent scientific assessment.

Annual progress reports will be done in each of the first three years, with a full peer review by the end of the implementation period in 2015. A full review will be conducted every five years after that.

No independent commission yet

The plot comes after panels appointed separately by the federal and provincial governments concluded last year that the existing monitoring systems were inadequate.

Last June, the Alberta Environmental Monitoring Panel called for a scientifically rigorous, independent monitoring commission.

Although it wasn’t announced Friday, McQueen said, work is proceeding on the commission, an thought she supports. But, she added, the immediate priority is getting the monitoring systems in place.

“To me what was most vital as minister is that we get this plot out quickly … so that we do not lose on this monitoring season,” she said.

But the lack of an independent commission troubled Linda Duncan, the NDP MP for Edmonton-Strathcona.

“Given the fact this won’t be an independent commission, how can we have confidence, given the secrecy in the Harper regime, that we are really going to get, in a quick time frame, access to that raw data?” she questioned.

Water monitoring in the oilsands was performed by the Regional Aquatics Monitoring Program (RAMP), which was funded by industry.

In 2010, the program was criticized by David Schindler, a world-renowned water biologist at the University of Alberta, after he published a study with his colleague, Erin Kelly, that linked toxins in the Athabasca River to oilsands mining.

RAMP officials had said that the toxins were caused by natural sources in the land.

But the findings in Schindler’s report led him to conclude that the current monitoring system was defective and insufficient, and prompted the federal and Alberta governments to convene expert panels on the issue.

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