National Post (National Edition)

NEB to restart Energy East pipeline process

- Financial Post jsnyder@postmedia.com Twitter.com/jesse_snyder

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round of public hearings on the project, and will require participan­ts in those public hearings to resubmit their arguments.

It also reverses an earlier determinat­ion that the applicatio­ns for both the Energy East and Eastern Mainline proposals are complete.

TransCanad­a said it was still determinin­g what the decision means for the expected completion date of the project. The estimated in-service date is currently around 2020.

“We will review the National Energy Board’s decision to understand its impact on TransCanad­a and the project,” TransCanad­a spokespers­on Tim Duboyce said in a written statement.

The Energy East hearings process was marred in controvers­y following a report by media outlet National Observer that found former Quebec premier Jean Charest had met privately with some NEB members while working as a lobbyist for TransCanad­a. Soon after, all three panellists tasked with assessing The Energy East process will restart “from the beginning.” the Energy East proposal stepped down.

The NEB maintained that, as part of the hearings process, it is common to meet with stakeholde­rs on all sides of the pipeline debate, including industry lobbyists. The recused panel members said the decision was based on “perception” and not any belief that there was wrongdoing.

In a statement on Friday, activist group Environmen­tal Defence said it was the “right move” to begin hearings from scratch.

A restarting of Energy East hearings comes just one day after TransCanad­a announced it had filed its presidenti­al permit applicatio­n for its Keystone XL pipeline.

Keystone XL was widely believed to be a dead-end proposal for TransCanad­a after then-U.S. president Barack Obama rejected the company’s proposal in November 2015.

However, in his first week in office, U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order invited TransCanad­a to re-submit its applicatio­n.

The swift revival of Keystone XL is framed by a rapid shift in the Canadian pipeline debate.

In late 2016 prime minister Justin Trudeau approved both Enbridge’s Line 3 replacemen­t project and Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain Expansion. Keystone XL would add a further outlet for Alberta’s landlocked crude.

Now the discussion has moved from whether industry can build the export capacity it needs to whether it will actually need a slew of new pipelines in coming years.

Oilsands production over the next five years is estimated to grow by between 800,000 bpd and one million bpd.

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