Notley urges NEB action on pipeline permit delays
• Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says she wants the National Energy Board to move quickly to remove roadblocks on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.
The City of Burnaby, B.C., hasn’t issued necessary permits to allow Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd. to expand its pipeline from the Edmonton area to port in Burnaby.
Kinder wants the board to clear the way for work to begin and Notley shares that view.
“We are going to push very hard to have that matter heard very quickly, because we think they are overreaching extensively. We should not be allowing projects that are of such national significance to be held up by municipalities using laws for purposes for which they were not intended,” Notley said Friday.
“The position of the municipality in that case is not very strong. Delay is not helpful and playing around with authorities in order to create delays is not the way to go.”
Kinder Morgan has said that Burnaby’s “failure to act in a timely manner raises serious issues of jurisdiction” related to the $ 7.4- billion pipeline expansion.
The company also wants the board to set up a way to make an “expedited determination” about similar complaints in the future.
Also on Friday, the Saskatchewan government said it has applied for intervener status in the energy board hearings on Trans Mountain.
Justice Minister Don Morgan said the interprovincial pipeline has already been approved and shouldn’t be held up by a municipality. He said Burnaby is deliberately slowing down an important project for an industry that is just starting to recover from sluggish oil prices.
“Saskatchewan has consistently taken the position that once an interprovincial pipeline has been approved by the federal government, provinces and municipalities should not be able to interfere,” Morgan said in a statement.
Notley welcomed Saskatchewan’s decision. “The more people that can be engaged in it (the hearing), the better. As I’ve said, we’re not particularly interested in pursuing a delay in that matter.”
Kinder has NEB and federal approvals to twin the pipeline, more than tripling its capacity, but CEO Steve Kean said delays in permits and approvals mean the project could be almost nine months behind schedule.