Calgary Herald

Trans Mountain pipeline could be delayed for years, experts say

Court ruling mandates new look at environmen­tal, Indigenous concerns

- LAURA KANE

VANCOUVER The Federal Court of Appeal’s decision to quash Ottawa’s approval of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is likely to delay the project for years, legal and political observers say.

The ruling means the National Energy Board must consider the impacts of increased tanker traffic on the marine environmen­t and the federal government must consult more meaningful­ly with First Nations.

The energy board should first conduct its new review, which will involve receiving written submission­s, consulting with Indigenous groups and holding hearings, said Chris Tollefson, a law professor at the University of Victoria.

The board’s first review took two years, and while the new assessment will be focused specifical­ly on tanker traffic, Tollefson said the board must seriously consider the effects on endangered southern resident killer whales.

“The reality is that this proposal as currently planned would impact orcas unless it is changed,” said Tollefson, who represente­d BC Nature and Nature Canada during the first energy board review.

There are only 75 southern resident orcas left and few have reproducti­ve potential. The project would have a serious impact unless design changes were made, such as altering shipping routes, reducing tanker speeds or the number of vessels, Tollefson said.

“In light of what the court had to say, I don’t think that should be hurried. I think it needs to be done right. It’s a central feature of this project.”

Once the board issues a new recommenda­tion to cabinet, the federal government will have to redo its final phase of consultati­on with all the affected First Nations along the pipeline route.

Eugene Kung, a lawyer who has worked for project opponent the Tsleil-Waututh Nation, warned that if Ottawa tries to rush consultati­on, the project could just wind up back before the court.

“The federal government continues to take direction from the courts and interpret it through a lens of, ‘What is the least we can do?’ ... In the age of reconcilia­tion, but also if the federal government is looking to avoid future appeals, they need to start aiming for something higher than the floor,” said Kung.

The court ruled that Canada must not only listen to First Nations during consultati­on, but also seriously consider their specific and real concerns and provide a response, including accommodat­ions where necessary.

For example, the Coldwater Indian Band in British Columbia’s southern Interior raised concerns about the pipeline route passing through an aquifer that is the sole supply of drinking water for the First Nation’s main reserve, but the government did not reroute the pipeline or provide a new water source.

“They were undertakin­g the (final) consultati­ons with First Nations in a rushed manner and not taking the time to listen, to try to accommodat­e and to have a genuinely two-way conversati­on, which takes longer than listening, taking notes and relaying them to decision-makers,” said Kathryn Harrison, a political scientist at the University of British Columbia.

It’s highly improbable Trudeau’s government will be able to get the board review and Indigenous consultati­ons done before the next election in the fall of 2019, said Harrison, who added that it’s difficult to say how the ruling will affect the Liberal government’s chances.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Flags mark a location for the expansion of the Trans Mountain Pipeline, in Burnaby, B.C. The project must now study the effect of shipping routes on orca whales.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Flags mark a location for the expansion of the Trans Mountain Pipeline, in Burnaby, B.C. The project must now study the effect of shipping routes on orca whales.

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