Lethbridge Herald

New start sought for Energy East review

GROUPS CALL FOR COMPLETE RESTART OF ENERGY EAST REVIEW AFTER NEW PANEL NAMED

- Ian Bickis THE CANADIAN PRESS — CALGARY

Environmen­tal groups are calling for the Energy East pipeline review process to start from scratch now that the National Energy Board has formally appointed new members to the review panel.

Transition Initiative Kenora filed a notice of motion Tuesday arguing that all decisions made by the prior panel members have been put into question after they stepped down because of questions about a potential conflict of interest last year.

“What we’re arguing is that because there is this reasonable apprehensi­on of bias associated with that panel, any of those discretion­ary decisions that they’ve made carry the taint of that potential bias,” said Teika Newton, executive director of Transition Initiative Kenora.

The Energy East hearings were stalled last fall after NEB chairman Peter Watson and vice-chair Lyne Mercier were accused of a conflict of interest for meeting privately with Jean Charest, who was a paid consultant at the time for the pipeline’s backer, TransCanad­a, to discuss public opinion around the controvers­ial project.

“There’s no way to remedy that, to fix that, by adding in a new panel and starting midway through the process. The only way to fix the problem is to start all over again from the beginning,” said Newton.

She said the members who stepped down sat on the panel for close to two years and made dozens of procedural and substantiv­e decisions in the review process, including determinin­g the scope of issues to be considered and who would get intervenor status in the hearings.

Transition Initiative Kenora, which was one of two groups to file a motion last year calling for the prior panel members to be removed, requested that the current Energy East process be declared void or referred to the Federal Court of Appeal.

The group filed the legal challenge a day after the NEB announced the new Energy East panel consisting of Don Ferguson, a former senior civil servant in New Brunswick, Carole Malo, a former vice-president at engineerin­g giant SNC-Lavalin, and Marc Paquin, a Quebec-based lawyer focused on environmen­tal law.

NEB spokeswoma­n Sarah Kiley said it will be up to the new Energy East panel to review the notice of motion and rule on it, as well as determine how to move forward.

The review panel will examine a proposed 4,500-kilometre pipeline that would carry 1.1-million barrels of crude oil per day from Alberta and Saskatchew­an to refineries in Eastern Canada and a marine terminal in New Brunswick.

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