Journal Pioneer

Trudeau says he is talking to premiers about Trans Mountain pipeline battle

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Just because Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is refusing to wade publicly into the emerging pipeline-induced trade war between British Columbia and Alberta, that doesn’t mean things aren’t happening out of the public eye, his environmen­t minister suggested Wednesday. Speaking in French after the weekly government caucus meeting, Catherine McKenna said things sometimes happen behind closed doors and that solutions are often more easily found without drama. Maybe so — but when it comes to the Trans Mountain pipeline dispute, the no-drama ship has officially sailed. B.C. threw down the gloves last week when it proposed a regulation to restrict expanded flows of oil through the province without a guarantee spills can be cleaned up — a measure that would effectivel­y halt, if not kill outright, the plan approved by Ottawa in 2016 to triple existing pipeline capacity between Alberta and B.C. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley responded by threatenin­g legal action, cancelling talks to buy electricit­y from B.C. and then, most recently on Tuesday, banning imports of B.C. wine.

Politicall­y, Notley needs the pipeline built to have any hope of re-election next year; B.C. Premier John Horgan campaigned on a promise to kill it off. His minority government’s tenuous grip on power depends on keeping the Green party happy — which means Horgan can’t back down. Pressure is mounting on the Trudeau government to intervene, and to do more to get the pipeline they approved actually built. Deputy federal Conservati­ve leader Lisa Raitt said Trudeau has the constituti­on on his side when exerting federal power to get constructi­on underway. Trudeau said in Edmonton last week he wasn’t going to wade into “disagreeme­nts between the provinces in this case” but that his government approved the pipeline and was going to get it built.

What remains unclear, however, is how the government plans to make that happen. “We’re continuing to discuss and engage with the B.C. government, with the Alberta government,” the prime minister said Wednesday before his weekly caucus meeting. “We’re making sure we come to the right place that’s in the national interest for Canada. “We’re going to continue to engage with the premiers on a regular basis.” Conservati­ve Natural Resources critic Shannon Stubbs said it’s unfair to Kinder Morgan, the company trying to build the pipeline, that it took four years to go through the federal assessment process, then another 15 months since federal approval — and its fate still hangs in the balance.

Trudeau says the pipeline is in the national interest, but is doing nothing to make it happen, she said.

Kinder Morgan had to ask the National Energy Board to intervene when the city of Burnaby refused to give permits to start constructi­on on the pipeline and the marine terminal where it ends. The board had to override Burnaby’s jurisdicti­on to grant the permits, saying it was withholdin­g them incorrectl­y.

Kinder Morgan is also awaiting approval on its final route for the pipeline expansion before it can begin constructi­on. Initially, Kinder Morgan hoped the $7.4-billion expansion would be up and running by the end of 2019; last month it revised that to December 2020.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau waves as he boards the government airplane on his way to Chicago, in Ottawa Wednesday.
CP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau waves as he boards the government airplane on his way to Chicago, in Ottawa Wednesday.

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