B.C. court rejects First Nations’ petition, but finds fishing rights were violated
VANCOUVER — A British Columbia Supreme Court judge has rejected a petition from two First Nations that asked for an injunction to force the restoration of natural flows of the Nechako River, which has been diverted for 70 years to generate hydroelectricity.
Justice Nigel Kent says in a written decision the Crown authorized the construction of the Kenney Dam, completed in the 1950s, along with the diversion of water to power a smelter run by Rio Tinto Alcan, the mining giant’s aluminum division.
Kent says the company has “strictly complied” with the terms of its water license and related contracts with the Crown, and Rio Tinto is not obligated to change how it manages the river in B.C.’s central Interior if it abides bythose authorizations.
At the same time, Kent found that operation of the dam and reservoir has “caused or contributed to a substantial decline” in local sturgeon and salmon populations, negatively impacting the Saik’uz and Stellat’en First Nations’ right to fish.