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New Brunswick fracking commission appointed

FREDERICTON – A former chief justice and two academics have been appointed to a commission in New Brunswick to determine whether government-placed conditions can be met before a moratorium on shale gas fracking can be lifted.

Former chief justice Guy Richard, former University of New Brunswick president John McLaughlin and Cheryl Robertson, a former board chairwoman at the New Brunswick Community College have been given up to a year to complete their work.

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Energy Minister Donald Arseneault says the moratorium won’t be lifted until the government’s five conditions can be met.

Those conditions include a plan for regulations, waste water disposal, a process to consult First Nations, a royalty structure and a so-called social licence.

Arseneault says the government can’t define what a social licence is, so it is asking the commission to do that.

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Previous studies on shale gas development have been launched in New Brunswick, including one released in October 2012 that rejected a moratorium on fracking and called for a phased-in approach.

Arseneault says the commission will be assigned a budget but did not say how much that was when asked by reporters.

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