National Post (National Edition)

Failure on pipeline spat could be Trudeau’s end

- Jivison@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/IvisonJ

planning to head to a vigil in Saskatchew­an for the victims of the Humboldt Broncos bus crash. The insensitiv­ity of the timing was a reminder that this is a foreign multinatio­nal, motivated solely by maximizing returns to its shareholde­rs.

Kinder Morgan’s demand for political certainty, in the face of various legal attempts by B.C.’s NDP government to block the project, is logical. The company is about to ramp up spending on the expansion, moving from clearing trees to laying pipe. It is not prepared to start that work until B.C. Premier John Horgan’s government backs down and, crucially, the legal approvals already won in court are enforced on the ground.

The City of Burnaby said late last month it will not pay RCMP overtime costs related to Trans Mountain because its citizens oppose the project. About 200 people have been arrested near the Burnaby marine terminal in the last month. The company’s concerns are no doubt sincere, but it is likely there is also a degree of opportunis­m at play — the sense the company can scoop up some of the free public money that appears to be on the table.

No sooner had the news broken on Sunday than Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said her province might seek an equity stake in the expansion to re-assure Kinder Morgan shareholde­rs. Curiously, Opposition Leader Jason Kenney agreed with her that the province should write a blank cheque to make a political problem go away.

A public sector injection of funds may well end up being part of the solution — it is certain to be on the agenda at the next federal cabinet meeting Tuesday. But it’s understood that to this point Kinder Morgan has resisted the suggestion of an equity investment, preferring to have provincial and federal government­s underwrite the project by providing risk insurance — essentiall­y leaving the government­s on the hook if the company decides to walk away.

Ottawa has options to persuade Horgan to back off, but none are infallible.

The federal government sends $6.9 billion to Victoria every year in health and social transfers. Trudeau could bring down that clunking fiscal fist on Horgan’s head. The premier is naive in the extreme if he thinks he can thumb his nose at the rest of the country without consequenc­e just to ensure the continued support of the three Green MLAs propping up his wobbly government. B.C. might be, as former Province columnist Eric Nicol put it, a large land mass surrounded on three sides by envy, but it is still connected economical­ly to the rest of Canada.

Yet there are risks in raising the temperatur­e, as Notley did when she warned British Columbians they “cannot mess with Alberta.”

Polling shows Trans Mountain enjoys more support than opposition among British Columbians, and the federal government is keen to keep it that way. If Ottawa is deemed to be acting unfairly, it would allow Horgan to wrap himself in B.C.’s setting-sun flag.

“If Horgan is seen as a champion of B.C. against Alberta and Ottawa, he has a chance,” one senior official said.

The preferred option on the federal side is to portray the rookie premier as an economic vandal.

The feds could try to assert their constituti­onal preeminenc­e by referring the case to the Supreme Court but that might suggest they have concerns their case is not solid — something nobody to this point has seriously disputed. The legal consensus is the B.C. government cannot impair a federally regulated undertakin­g.

But legal niceties and politics are two different beasts, and it is unlikely any kind of legal progress could be made on Kinder Morgan’s timeline.

Trudeau and his ministers are keeping their preferred option close to their chests, but in Montreal on Monday, the prime minister was as combative as he gets outside the boxing ring.

“It is not up to the premier of B.C. to interfere in a project in the national interest,” he said. “It will get built.”

Such optimism appears at odds with the available facts, but maybe he knows something we don’t.

There are whispers that if Kinder Morgan were to walk away, the Trans Mountain pipeline (and the regulatory approval for the expansion) might be bought by Canadian investors, in the same way that domestic players like Canadian Natural Resources and Suncor stepped up to buy assets divested by multinatio­nals like Shell.

Whatever levers the prime minister intends to pull, his confidence had best not be misplaced. The Liberals’ grand bargain to introduce carbon pricing and build pipelines was sound in theory, but the carbon tax is facing growing opposition in provincial capitals and now the pipeline is in jeopardy.

If Trudeau fails to get it built, it will be the biggest blow to his credibilit­y since he took office.

In the past, Trudeau has let himself down, which is his prerogativ­e. But if Trans Mountain is blocked, he will have let his country down. That will not be allowed to stand.

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