Commissioner hopes Ottawa’s save-the-whales effort is not ‘too little, too late’
OTTAWA — The federal government didn’t do much to protect some of its most at-risk whales until the majestic creatures were already in great peril, Canada’s environmental watchdog says.
Environment commissioner Julie Gelfand says Canada had the tools to safeguard North Atlantic right whales, Southern resident killer whales and other marine mammals from being hit by ships, tangled in fishing gear or losing their food sources — but it waited until after 12 right whales died in a single summer and the killer whale population was on the verge of extinction.
“I hope this is not too little, too late,” Gelfand said Tuesday in releasing her latest round of audits.
Gelfand’s latest audits come just as Ottawa is trying to prove to the courts it is doing enough to protect the Southern resident killer whale, in particular, from risks, so it can proceed with a plan to expand the Trans Mountain pipeline.


