National Post

More on court rulings,

Energy project rulings

- JESSE SNYDER

OTTAWA• In separate decisions Wednesday, the Supreme Court of Canada has clarified to what degree oil and gas companies have a duty to consult with Aboriginal communitie­s, while also detailing the role of the national energy regulator within the consultati­on process.

The Court ruled in favour of the Inuit hamlet of Clyde River, Nunavut, in its yearslong bid to stop a Norwegian consortium from conducting seismic testing near its traditiona­l territory in Baffin Bay. In a separate ruling, the court upheld the National Energy Board’s approval of Enbridge Inc.’ s expansion and reversal of its Line 9 pipeline. It was appealed by the Chippewas of the Thames First Nation in southern Ontario.

Both decisions provided clarity around the adequate level of consultati­on in energy project proposals. They also bolstered the NEB’s ability to carry out consultati­ons in so-called “expedited” review for smaller proposals under which the federal cabinet does not have the final say.

Supreme Court Justices Andromache Karakatsan­is and Russell Brown said the NEB is compelled to have clear and reciprocal discussion­s with local communitie­s, and give locals the opportunit­ies to ask questions and respond to proposals. The justices ruled the NEB failed to meet that standard in Clyde River, but successful­ly met that expectatio­n during consultati­ons over the Line 9 project.

The decisions come amid a growing expectatio­n that private companies and the national regulator engage in deeper consultati­ons with local people impacted by oil and gas developmen­t.

It also comes as Ottawa conducts consultati­ons in its attempt to restructur­e the NEB, which could soon be saddled with a far broader mandate, including the need to consider total upstream emissions in its approval process.

Experts have pondered whether the NEB will have the capacity to account for broader e nvironment­al questions, suggesting the regulatory body would need require a substantia­l bulking up.

“Were they to have to carry out consultati­ons, it would at the least need more resources, but might also need other adaptation­s,” said Dwight Newman, a professor at the University of Saskatchew­an.

Tom Isaac, a partner in Aboriginal law at Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP, said the ruling provides some clarity around the extent to which the NEB is required to carry out its own consultati­ons. “The outcome of this ruling establishe­s legal predictabi­lity and stability for all parties,” he said in a statement.

Wednesday’s ruling signals a willingnes­s to override the approval of projects by regulatory bodies if duty to consult is not met. The justices wrote that the Crown “always holds ultimate responsibi­lity for ensuring consultati­on is adequate” as part of the rationale for its decision.

In the Clyde River case, the court said its ruling was not due to environmen­tal risk, but because consultati­ons did not properly address Inuit treaty rights that allow locals to hunt large mammals and fish in the region.

The consortium, made up of Norwegian companies TGS-NOPEC Geophysica­l Company, Petroleum GeoService­s and Multiklien­t Invest AS, planned to conduct seismic airblast testing, a process that allows companies to seek out pockets of oil and gas trapped beneath the sea floor.

Residents of Clyde River worried the l oud airgun blasts used in seismic tests could have unknown impacts on population­s of narwhal, beluga, bowhead whale and walrus.

“This could change the migration routes of whales,” former Clyde River mayor Jerry Natanine said before the court ruled.

He says some residents are concerned the blasts could either physically harm whales and fish, or potentiall­y scare them off to regions beyond the reach of local fishermen. “That would be devastatin­g,” he said.

Natanine said the consortium consulted with the l ocal Inuit communitie­s, but that it did not provide adequate responses to local concerns. In one instance, the community asked for video monitoring of how fish would react to airgun blasts, but the consortium did not provide it, he said.

Meanwhile, in upholding approval of Enbridge’s reversal and expansion of its Line 9 project, the court ruled that the Calgary company’s consultati­on with local communitie­s was “far more robust” than the Norwegian consortium’s consultati­ons with residents of Baffin Island.

The court said Enbridge’s consultati­on process was “manifestly adequate.” The company hosted several oral hearings before work on the pipeline began. Locals were also given adequate time to submit written concerns to the NEB.

Enbridge years ago proposed to reverse and expand the Sarnia-to-Montreal pipel i ne, i ncreasing capacity from 240,000 barrels per day to 300,000. It was approved by the NEB in March 2014, and went into service December 2015.

Enbridge applied for the reversal in order to transport heavy oil from Western Canada to refineries in Ontario and Quebec.

In a statement, the company said it “appreciate­s and respects” the SCC decision.

As for Clyde River, the decision appears unlikely to have much impact on oil and gas developmen­t in the region. Ottawa imposed a five- year ban on oil and gas exploratio­n in Arctic waters in December 2016, and low oil prices have made fossil fuel developmen­t uneconomic in remote Northern locations.

(BLASTS) COULD CHANGE THE MIGRATION ROUTES OF WHALES.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jerry Natanine, community leader and former mayor of Clyde River, holds a feather as he speaks Wednesday.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS Jerry Natanine, community leader and former mayor of Clyde River, holds a feather as he speaks Wednesday.

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