National Post

First Nations claim Ottawa snubbed them over pipeline

- By Laura Kane

• Two First Nations waging a court battle to overturn approval of the Northern Gateway pipeline project say federal officials refused to discuss their claim of decision-making power over ancestral lands.

Lawyer Cheryl Sharvit said the Nadleh Whut’en and Nak’azdli are not declaring the right to veto resource projects on traditiona­l territorie­s in B.C.’s Central Interior.

But she said the bands’ asserted authority to govern their lands should have at least been considered by the Crown during consultati­ons on the $7-billion proposal by Calgary-based Enbridge Inc.

“The scale of the potential harm from Northern Gateway in their territory is unpreceden­ted. They have never faced a risk this great from their perspectiv­e from a single project,” Sharvit said. The Crown’s refusal to first negotiate with the Nadleh and Nak’azdli “does serious damage to the goal of reconcilia­tion and protection of aboriginal rights.”

The Crown excluded the issue from the talks because it decided the question of control over First Nations’ territorie­s would be better dealt with in the treaty process, Sharvit said.

Eight aboriginal bands are in the Federal Court of Appeal in Vancouver to argue Canada violated its legal duty to consult with and accommodat­e First Nations before approving Northern Gateway. More than 200 conditions were attached.

The 1,200-kilometre twin pipeline would carry diluted bitumen from Alberta’s oilsands to the coastal district of Kitimat, B.C., where tankers would ship it overseas.

The court is considerin­g a total of 18 legal challenges during the hearing, which is set to conclude Oct. 8. Its outcome could have far-reaching implicatio­ns for aboriginal authority over oil and gas projects.

Many First Nations in B.C. have not signed treaties and have unresolved land claims. But they argue a landmark Supreme Court of Canada ruling in June 2014 giving the Tsilhqot’in Nation title to its territory means Ottawa must seek consent from First Nations to approve developmen­ts on their lands.

Spokesman Ivan Giesbrecht has said Enbridge accepts First Nations’ traditiona­l land use rights and remains committed to working with aboriginal communitie­s.

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