Journal Pioneer

Ottawa restarting Indigenous talks over pipeline

-

The federal government will not appeal the court decision that tore up cabinet approval for the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion and is appointing former Supreme Court justice Frank Iacobucci to oversee a new round of consultati­ons with Indigenous communitie­s. Natural Resources Minister Amarjeet Sohi says the government does not intend to start the phase-three Indigenous consultati­ons from the beginning, but will use them to address the weaknesses that led to the Federal Court of Appeal decision in August.

The court found that while the government did spend several months in 2016 meeting with Indigenous communitie­s concerned about the pipeline, those consultati­ons were largely notetaking exercises and the government did not do anything to address the concerns that were raised.

The Trans Mountain pipeline expansion plan to triple capacity of the existing pipeline between Edmonton and Burnaby, B.C., is in limbo while Ottawa attempts to fulfil requiremen­ts to consult Indigenous communitie­s and consider the environmen­tal impact the pipeline will have from additional oil tankers off the coast of British Columbia.

Last month, Sohi ordered the National Energy Board to go back and do a better environmen­tal review of the risk of oil spills and the impact on marine life when the number of oil tankers in the Burrard Inlet rises to 35 a month from about five. Sohi gave the NEB until the end of February to report back on the environmen­tal review, but is not putting a deadline on the Indigenous consultati­ons.

“We believe that meaningful consultati­on can be undertaken in a focused and efficient manner,” he told a news conference Wednesday.

“We are not going to put a timeline on these consultati­ons because we feel that it is our duty to faithfully engage with the Indigenous communitie­s to get this right.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada