Media Contacts

Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy

Media Relations
250 953-3834

Backgrounders

Application to designate Bamberton projects as reviewable under Environmental Assessment Act
  • Under the Environmental Assessment Act, any group or person can apply to have a project designated as reviewable. Reviewable projects require an environmental assessment by the Environmental Assessment Office (EAO), and an environmental assessment certificate, to move forward.
  • The EAO thoroughly assesses each request to recommend to the Minister of Environment and Climate Change Strategy whether or not a project should require an environmental assessment.
  • Saanich Inlet Protection Society asked the EAO on Nov. 2, 2022, to require an environmental assessment for the Bamberton quarry expansion and related activities, which do not meet the thresholds to automatically require an EAO assessment.
  • The Reviewable Projects Regulation of the Environmental Assessment Act governs whether a modification to an existing quarry is automatically subject to an environmental assessment. To trigger an automatic review, a project must meet both of the following criteria: increase of 50% or greater to the previously permitted area (the area of land that can be disturbed); and an annual production rate exceeding 250,000 tonnes.
  • Malahat Investment Corporation applied to the Ministry of Energy, Mines and Low-Carbon Innovation in May 2019 to expand the existing quarry. The application reviewed by the EAO in its review proposed to increase production capacity to 479,000 tonnes per year – up from 240,000 (a 99.6% increase) – and expand the mine permit area from 39.3 hectares to 45.7 hectares (a 16% increase).
  • The proponent had also applied to the Ministry of Forests to renew the 30-year foreshore lease for barging activities at the site, which expired in 2019 and has been renewed month-to-month since. The review of the application under the Land Act has been on hold during the EAO’s review.
  • The Cowichan Valley Regional District issued Malahat Investment Corporation a permit in October 2020 authorizing the continued operation of a clean-fill site adjacent to the quarry. The permit allows storage of soil that meets the standards for residential developments.