Calgary Herald

NEB sets out permit dispute resolution process

-

The National Energy Board is setting up a process to resolve future permitting issues between Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd. and provincial and municipal authoritie­s on the Trans Mountain expansion project.

The NEB said Thursday that under the process, it will take about three to five weeks to reach a decision on future permitting disputes.

The regulator said it still expects all sides to go through the permitting process in good faith, but the board will step in when necessary on permitting issues that affect NEB conditions on the project.

“This generic process will provide a measure of certainty regarding the regulatory tools available to resolve permitting disputes or disagreeme­nts in limited circumstan­ces where Trans Mountain and provincial and municipal authoritie­s are unable to do so,” the NEB said in a release.

Kinder Morgan Canada had asked for a way to resolve future disputes after encounteri­ng what it called significan­t delays on securing permits from Burnaby, B.C.

B.C. municipali­ties had made submission­s against the proposal, with Chilliwack expressing concern the company may use it as a pressure mechanism or as leverage against the city. Surrey said the motion is an attempt to unlawfully fetter, circumvent, and undermine the legislativ­e scheme to the detriment of municipali­ties.

Outside supporters of the Trans Mountain project, including the Alberta and federal government­s, supported the proposal as a way to address compliance oversight.

The NEB said it expects the process to be rarely used, and it would only step in for limited reasons.

Kinder Morgan Canada had asked that a standing panel be set up to hear the potential disputes, but the NEB said it would decide who would hear issues as they arise.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada