Is Wood Buffalo National Park at Risk of Destruction? First Nation Says Yes!
Wood Buffalo National Park, a UNESCO registered location, is at risk of destruction according to the Fort Chipewyan Mikisew Cree First Nation band. The group has forwarded a request to UNESCO asking that the site is reclassified to show that it is at risk. As the largest national park in Canada the Wood Buffalo National Park was first designated as a UNESCO heritage site in 1983, due to the fact that it contains the biggest freshwater delta in the world. It is also the only Whooping Crane resting habitat that is natural, and the bird is already endangered. The First Nation band is concerned about an industrial sector that is encroaching on the 45,000 square kilometer park. According to the group the water levels in the park have gone down considerably in recent years because of industrial development in the area.
There are 2 proposed projects in the works that have heightened the First Nation band’s concerns about the risk to the UNESCO site, and the group is worried that the Wood Buffalo National Park is in danger because of the projects. One of the projects is the Site C Dam in British Columbia, and the other is Teck’s Frontier Oil Sands Mine. The First Nation group is concerned that either of these proposed projects could cause even further water level loss in the park, and affect the natural environment and habitat. According to Chief Steve Courtoreille “The water levels have always been a concern over the years, and we don’t know what the park will look like once the dams are built.I don’t know what it will take for governments to listen and realize what they’re doing by approving these licenses before understanding how it will impact the delta. This place is in danger of disappearing from the world.”