Strategies for Cleaning Up Contaminated Sites in Alberta

Date
2013-05
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Canadian Institute of Resources Law
Abstract
A major obstacle to the goal of sustainable urban development has been the ongoing presence of historic contamination. No one wants to live, work or play next to contaminated land. These so-called brownfield sites often remain abandoned and underutilized lands that could be put to higher or better uses if the longstanding problem of contamination is addressed. This paper identifies key factors underlying the brownfield market failure and discusses ways to correct the market failure. The paper looks at improved information through capacity building, fixing structural problems associated with the regulatory system, such as the way liability rules operate within environmental legislation, and a sustainable development approach through greater municipal action. It attempts to integrate current theories of liability with the regulatory framework under federal, provincial and municipal law, and discusses the rapid expansion of municipal activism as a good approach to an effective brownfield strategy.
Description
Keywords
Brownfield, Federal Role in Brownfields, Discovering and Identifying Brownfields
Citation
Robert K. Omura, CIRL Occasional Paper #41, Strategies for Cleaning Up Contaminated Sites in Alberta (Calgary: Canadian Institute of Resources Law, 2013)