Calgary Herald

Expert quits pipeline panel, calls it ‘ rigged’

- LAURA KANE

A prominent economist has dropped out of the National Energy Board’s review of Kinder Morgan’s proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, accusing the board of betraying Canadians with a “biased” and “broken” process.

Robyn Allan, an outspoken critic of the expansion, said she is withdrawin­g as an expert intervener because the review’s scope is so narrow that the outcome is predetermi­ned.

“It’s a rigged game,” a former CEO of the Insurance Corp. of British Columbia said Wednesday. “We’re getting the scope that supports Kinder Morgan. It’s a private sector, ‘ How do we get to yes?’ masqueradi­ng as a public interest review.”

Kinder Morgan’s proposed $ 5.4- billion expansion would twin an existing pipeline from Alberta to Burnaby, B. C., tripling its capacity to 890,000 barrels of petroleum a day. The energy board is expected to make a final decision on the project next January.

The board had approved Allan’s participat­ion for her expertise in risk, insurance, economics and corporate structure. About 400 intervener­s are involved in the Trans Mountain review.

Spokeswoma­n Tara O’Donovan said the board values public input and was “disappoint­ed” Allan chose to withdraw. She strongly rejected accusation­s of bias and insisted the review was fair.

“Every board member is held to an exemplary standard of ethical conduct and has a desire to serve the Canadian public interest,” O’Donovan said in a statement.

In a scathing letter to the board this week, Allan questioned why the review was limited to the proposed new pipeline and infrastruc­ture, rather than looking at the existing line and system as a whole.

“When you have an earthquake, for example, and it disrupts two pipelines because they’re in close proximity and some of the oil spills into the Fraser River, they’re not looking at that,” Allan said.

She also criticized the panel for examining only the capacity that Kinder Morgan had applied for — 540,000 barrels — rather than the much greater capacity that’s part of its design.

She also questioned why the marine shipping assessment is limited to an area of just 12 nautical miles. Allan said the exclusion of oral cross- examinatio­n, allowing the company to respond in writing to questions, had turned the hearing into a “farce.”

 ??  ?? Robyn Allan
Robyn Allan

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