Title: IDENTIFYING AND ASSESSING ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
1IDENTIFYING AND ASSESSING ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
- beginning the environmental assessment
2ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK
Proposal
Scoping
Identification and assessment of effects
Project and environmental components
Analysis of effects
Identification of mitigation
ANALYSIS OF EFFECTS
Evaluation of significance
Post decision activity
3IDENTIFICATION AND ASSESSMENT PROCESS
- Describe the project
- Describe the environment
- Identify environmental effects
- Assess environmental effects
41. DESCRIBE PROJECT
- Depending on the nature, size and location of the
project the description could include - need, purpose, niche, rationale
- size, scope and phasing of activities
- location map showing project site and area
- site plan showing project infrastructure
- schematic drawings, process diagrams, etc.
- Kinds of materials, products, etc. produced
- estimates of solid, liquid and gaseous wastes
- employees, sub-contractors, equipment, etc.
- funding (sources and amounts)
- proposed schedule
5SOURCES OF INFORMATION
- Proposal (main source)
- Planning documents
- Preliminary studies
- Proponent
- Project manager
- Project location
- Other similar projects
- Other similar assessments
Note CEAA definition of a project and MEA
definition of a development
6PROJECT NEED AND PURPOSE
- Project need and purpose should be established
from the perspective of the proponent - Need
- Need is defined as the problem or opportunity the
project is to solve or satisfy - establishes the fundamental rationale for the
project - Purpose
- purpose is defined as what is to be achieved by
carrying out the project in relation to the need
7PROJECT ALTERNATIVES
- Depending on the project need and purpose,
alternatives may include - alternatives to the project including no project
- alternative means of carrying out the project
- site location alternatives
- project size alternatives
- design alternatives
- construction, operation and
decommissioning alternatives - phasing alternatives
- timing alternatives
Note CEAA can require consideration of
alternatives to the project and alternative means
of carrying out the project. MEA may require
consideration of alternatives
8PROJECT COMPONENTS
- Main parts of the project
- 1. Schedule components
- planning, design, construction, operation, etc.
- effects may be additive
- 2. Phasing components
- phase 1, 2, 3, etc.
- incremental components
- 3. Physical components
- road, bridge, factory, waste storage, etc.
- one component may be dependent on another
- one component may lead to another
9PROJECT ACTIVITIES
- Actions that are carried out as part of a project
component - Cause effects or changes in the environment
- Activities usually end in ing
- Examples
- surveying
- constructing
- excavating
- dredging
- restoring, etc.
- Used in checklists, matrices, etc.
10PROJECT DESCRIPTION QUANTIFICATION
- Area covered or footprint km2
- Size of buildings m2
- Materials used numbers, volumes, weights
- Natural resources used tonnes, board-feet
- Goods manufactured number/type/day
- Products produced number/year
- Wastes produced (solid, liquid) kg, L
- Workforce employed no. people
- Capital expenditures
112. DESCRIBE ENVIRONMENT
- Description of the environment should identify
biophysical, social and economic characteristics
of the environment including - relevant physical features and characteristics
- biological, ecological characteristics
- social conditions
- economic conditions
- aesthetic and cultural values
- present land uses
- resource uses
- patters of human disturbance
- First Nations interests
Note CEAA and MEA definitions of the environment
12SOURCES OF INFORMATION
- Regional data bases
- Local studies
- Aerial photos, satellite imagery, maps
- Other environmental assessments
- Contacts (government, private, etc.)
- Experts (universities, museums, etc.)
- Proponent
- Libraries
- Internet
- Literature reviews
- Site visits
- Data collection
13BASELINE INFORMATION
- Baseline information characterizes conditions at
the time the project is proposed - Starting point for prediction and quantification
of environmental effects resulting from the
proposed project - Seasonal and year-to-year fluctuations in
environmental conditions to be considered over
the longer term - Change in the environment measured by comparing
the expected future state of environmental
components if the project were not to go ahead - quantification important
14ENVIRONMENTAL COMPONENTS
- Main components or parts of the environment
- Biophysical air, water, land, animals, etc.
- Social people, culture, recreation, etc.
- Economic employment, business opportunities
- Biophysical components are often broken down and
described on a thematic basis - Air quality, microclimate,
- Surface water flows, quality
- Groundwater regime, quality
- Vegetation groundcover, shrub, forest
- Wildlife mammals, birds, amphibians
- Fish species accounts
- Used in checklists, matrices, etc.
15ENVIRONMENTAL ELEMENTS
- Sub-components of environmental components
- Examples elements for the wildlife component may
include - Caribou
- Moose
- Deer
- Beaver
- Martin
- Checklists, professional judgment are often used
to identify environmental elements
16ENVIRONMENTAL ATTRIBUTES
- Main features or characteristics of environmental
components or elements - Example attributes for birds include
- migrating
- nesting
- rearing
- fledging
- molting
- Checklists, professional judgment and expert
knowledge are often used to identify
environmental attributes - Attributes should be measurable
17VALUED ECOSYSTEM SOCIAL COMPONENTS
- Components, elements or attributes of the
biophysical and social- economic environment that
are considered to be important or valuable and
merit detailed consideration in the environmental
assessment - Determined by practitioners, experts and/or
professional judgment with public input - Criteria can be used to determine importance or
value - Can be used as indicators of environmental change
18VALUED ECOSYSTEM SOCIAL COMPONENTS
- Example VSCs
- economy, jobs, etc.
- social services
- standard of living
- quality of life
- commercial activities (fishing, farming, etc.)
- traditional activities (hunting, trapping, etc.)
- subsistence activities
- parks, preserves, heritage sites
- Example VECs
- indicator species
- rare, threatened and endangered species
- important food species
- important, critical habitat
- traditional harvest species
- commercially important species
- representative species, habitats
- research sites
19ENVIRONMENT DESCRIPTION QUANTIFICATION
- Example quantitative environmental descriptions
- Particulates in air 35 mg/m3
- Total Suspended Sediments 33 mg/L
- Depth to groundwater 12 m
- 450 ha of old growth forest
- 23 aspen
- 2 moose/km2
- Average income of 35,000
- 5 unemployment rate
203. IDENTIFY ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
- Environmental effects are identified
- by relating project components and activities to
environmental components and elements - using an accepted method such as a checklist,
matrix, map overlay, network - as indicators of potential changes in the
environment - as changes in the environment relative to
baseline conditions - pending verification by follow-up monitoring
21ADVERSE EFFECTS ON THE ENVIRONMENT
- Negative effects on health of biota - plants,
animals, fish, - Threat to rare or endangered species
- Restrictions in species diversity
- Loss of or damage to habitats
- Discharges or releases of substances
- Population declines
- Removal of resource materials, etc.
22ADVERSE EFFECTS ON PEOPLE
- Negative effects on human health, well-being,
quality of life, - Increase in unemployment
- Reduction of the recreation opportunities
- Detrimental change in land use
- Negative effects on cultural resources
- Decreased aesthetic values
- Loss of commercial species, etc.
23ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
- Natural environment (e.g. ecosystem) is
constantly changing and evolving - Change may be random or predictable
- Random events, mutations, etc.
- Predictable seasons, trends, etc.
- Baseline information is a starting point without
development - Monitoring detects natural change relative to
baseline - Environmental assessment predicts change in
environment relative to baseline over time
considering natural change
24CHANGE vs. EFFECT
- Change in an environmental attribute provides an
indication of an effect in/on the environment - Environmental attributes or indicators provide a
means to predict environmental effects - Steps in determining environmental effects
- identification of changes in attributes
- measurement of changes in attributes
- aggregation of changes in attributes to reflect
an effect or impact on the environment
25EFFECT vs. IMPACT
- Effect
- Individual changes in environmental attributes
due to a project activities - May be many different individual changes from
various project activities - e.g. effect of disturbing sediment on turbidity
- Impact
- Overall change in the environment caused by all
project activities (sum of effects) - Impact of project on environmental component
- Impact of project on ecosystem (e.g. aquatic)
26MEASUREMENT OF EFFECTS
- Selecting measurable variables
- Use scoping to ensure the assessment is focused
on valued ecosystem components or VECs - Choose indicators that best reflect the potential
effects on selected VECs - Identify the measurable parameters to be used for
quantifying environmental effects for the
indicator/VEC in question
27Example Indicators and Parameters
- Examples of VECs, Indicators and Measurable
Parameters - Air Quality
- Outdoor Air Acid Gas Concentrations SOx (mg/m3)
- Vegetation and Wildlife
- Forest Availability of Cover Types Ha of
cover type - Deer Winter Habitat Availability Size of Deer
Yards - Grizzly Bear Summer Foraging Habitat No.
Habitat Units - Groundwater
- Water Quality Drinking Water Quality WQ
Parameters
28Example Indicators and Parameters
- Examples of VECs, Indicators and Measurable
Parameters - Surface Water
- Water Quality Turbidity TSS
- Aquatic Biology
- Lake Whitefish Population Size No. of fish
- Spawning Habitat ha of habitat
- Human Health
- Public/Worker health Dose to individual
rads/rems - Dose to populations
29SUSTAINABILITY INDICATORS
- Information that can reflect the status of larger
systems of which human society is a part - Examples
- Manitoba Water Quality Index
- Fish species diversity and population
- Change in land use
- Food meeting quality standards
- Labour force index
30CATEGORIES OF EFFECTS
- Generic effects that are associated with
particular projects - Site-specific effects that depend upon the
project location and conditions that prevail in
the project area - Social value judgements based on ethics,
morality, fairness and equity - Effect linkages relationships between
biophysical effects are difficult to assess
31POSITIVE NEGATIVE EFFECTS
- Positive
- Beneficial effects of a project such as
employment, economic benefits, ... - Negative
- Adverse effects of a project such as loss of
aesthetic or cultural values
Note cannot simply use positive effects to
counter negative effects or determine overall
impact of project on the environment
32DIRECT INDIRECT EFFECTS
- Direct
- Immediate effect of a project such as the effect
of an employment centre on aesthetics, traffic,
removal of vegetation, modification of waterways - Indirect
- Effects of a project that are removed in time and
space such as additional housing or new
businesses resulting from the employment centre
33PRIMARY, SECONDAY TERTIARY EFFECTS
- Primary (direct)
- increase in turbidity of a stream due to erosion
of shoreline from disturbance - Secondary (indirect)
- reduction in egg survival on spawning grounds
- Tertiary (indirect)
- decrease in fish population
34CUMULATIVE ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
- Effects of a project in combination with the
effects of other projects in the same region over
the same time period - Requires knowledge of other projects,
environmental effects - Effects assessed are usually additive
- Cumulative effects can also be
- incremental additive or repeated
- synergistic or complex
- evident when threshold is passed
- triggered by a feed-back process
- manifested in other ways
35DESCRIBING ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
- Example Cutting aspen in the boreal forest
- Poor
- Loss of aspen
- Decrease in the presence of aspen
- Reduction in the number of aspen
- Good
- Removal of 100 ha of aspen over 5-year period
- Loss of 20 aspen/ha over 100 ha
- Cutting 4500 aspen over 100 ha
364. ASSESS ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
- Identify potential environmental effects
- Determine whether effects are adverse
- Distinguish among effects that are
- Insignificant no mitigation required
- Unknown require further assessment
- Potentially significant mitigation required
- Focus assessment on important adverse effects
37ASSESSMENT FACTORS
- Direction (positive/negative)
- Magnitude (relative size)
- Geographic area / extent (local, regional, )
- Ecological context
- Duration
- Frequency
- Reversibility
- Risk
- Precedence
- Others ...
38ASSESSMENT CRITERIA
- High / Medium / Low
- 1 - 100
- Good / bad
- Positive / negative
- Weighted values
- Objectives
- Thresholds
- Standards
- Regulatory limits
- Protected areas, species, habitats
39EXAMPLE RANKING (ORDINAL)
- 0 no effect
- 1 negligible effect
- 2 minor effect (slight or short term)
- 3 moderate effect (mitigation likely required)
- 4 major (reversible or long term)
- 5 severe (permanent)
40EXAMPLE DESCRIPTIVE RANKING
- Negligible effect not observable, detectible,
measurable - Low not likely important, small area, short
duration - mitigation may not be required - Medium likely important, wider area, medium
duration - mitigation may be required - High important, large area, large area -
mitigation required
41ASSESSMENT TABLE
42Next class
- Read about mitigating adverse environmental
effects in text book - Know what mitigation means
- Know what residual environmental effects are
- Read about evaluating significance
- Know what significance means
- Come to class prepared to discuss mitigation and
significance