History, overview, and governance of environmental monitoring in the oil sands region of Alberta, Canada.
Monique G DubéJenna M DunlopCarla DavidsonDanielle L BeausoleilRoderick R O HazewinkelFaye WyattPublished in: Integrated environmental assessment and management (2021)
Over the past decades, concerns regarding the local and cumulative impacts of oil sands development have been increasing. These concerns reflect the industry's emissions, land disturbance, water use, and the resulting impacts to Indigenous Rights. Effective environmental management is essential to address and ultimately manage these concerns. A series of ambient regional monitoring programs in the oil sands region (OSR) have struggled with scope and governance. In the last 10 years, monitoring has evolved from a regulatory-driven exercise implemented by industry into a focused, collaborative, multistakeholder program that attempts to integrate rigorous science from a multitude of disciplines and ways of knowing. Monitoring in the region continues to grapple with leadership, governance, data management, scope, and effective analysis and reporting. This special series, "A Decade of Research and Monitoring in the Oil Sands Region of Alberta, Canada," provides a series of critical reviews that synthesize 10 years of published monitoring results to identify patterns of consistent ecological responses or effects, significant gaps in knowledge, and recommendations for improved monitoring, assessment, and management of the region. The special series considered over 300 peer-reviewed papers and represents the first integrated critical review of the published literature from the region. This introductory paper of the series introduces the history of ambient environmental monitoring in the OSR and discusses historic and ongoing challenges with the environmental monitoring effort. While significant progress has been made in areas of governance, expanded geographical scope, and inclusion of Indigenous communities in monitoring in the region, significant issues remain regarding a lack of integrated reporting on environmental conditions, public access to data, and continuity of monitoring efforts over time. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2021;00:1-14. © 2021 SETAC.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- public health
- physical activity
- systematic review
- climate change
- air pollution
- electronic health record
- randomized controlled trial
- emergency department
- high intensity
- machine learning
- particulate matter
- adverse drug
- fatty acid
- body composition
- transcription factor
- data analysis
- global health
- risk assessment
- artificial intelligence
- life cycle