Ottawa Citizen

IT’S A PIPE DREAM TO THINK LANDLOCKED OIL-PRODUCING WESTERN PROVINCES WOULD HAVE AN EASIER TIME GETTING THEIR PRODUCT TO INTERNATIO­NAL MARKETS IF THEY WERE TO ‘WEXIT,’ TRADE EXPERTS SAY.

United Nations provision needs two willing sides

- LAUREN KRUGEL

CALGARY • Internatio­nal trade experts say it’s a pipe dream to think the landlocked oil-producing Western provinces would have an easier time getting their product to internatio­nal markets if they were to split from Canada.

“Wexit” — a play on the word “Brexit” used to describe the United Kingdom’s planned departure from the European Union — was trending on social media after the Liberals secured a minority government in the Oct. 21 federal election, but were shut out of Alberta and Saskatchew­an.

Peter Downing, a founder of the Western separatist movement that wants a referendum on separation, has said an independen­t country in the middle of the Prairies could leverage the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea to gain coastal pipeline access.

“We have more freedom as an independen­t country to get our resources to the coast than as part of Canada,” he said the day after the election.

“We’ll have the best of both worlds: We’ll keep our money and we’ll have access to the coast.”

The UN convention, adopted in 1982, does say that “landlocked states shall enjoy freedom of transit through the territory of transit states by all means of transport.”

However, it goes on to say that terms “shall be agreed between the landlocked states and transit states concerned through bilateral, subregiona­l or regional agreements,” and that transit states have the right to ensure their “legitimate interests” aren’t infringed upon.

“It’s not an unqualifie­d right. They can’t just say, ‘OK, we need to get through here,’ ” said Silvia Maciunas, a fellow at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ont.

“They have to talk to the other state, which would be Canada.”

The “means of transport” in the convention refers to railways, waterways, roads and even porters and pack animals, but the treaty specifies that landlocked and transit states would have to agree to add pipelines to the list.

Landlocked countries such as Ethiopia and Switzerlan­d have long had agreements to use ports in other countries.

Bolivia, on the other hand, lost its ocean access in a war with Chile in the 1800s and has been fighting to regain it ever since. The Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague ruled last year that Chile has no obligation to engage in talks with Bolivia.

“Had the court ruled in the favour of Bolivia, Chile would have theor

THE ABILITY TO GO FROM ‘PLEASE GIVE US ACCESS’ TO ‘PRETTY PLEASE GIVE US ACCESS.’

etically been obligated to enter into ‘good faith’ negotiatio­ns, whatever the heck that means,” said Carlo Dade, director of the Trade and Investment Centre at the Canada West Foundation.

“You can imagine how that would play out up here if Alberta, Saskatchew­an leave ... We’ve seen enough out of B.C. to know how that would play out,” said Dade.

The British Columbia government has resisted, primarily through court actions, the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion that would triple the amount of crude shipped between Alberta and the Lower Mainland.

Additional­ly, there is no real enforcemen­t mechanism through the internatio­nal court, Dade said.

“The only thing the ICJ gives you is the ability to go from saying, ‘Please give us access’ to ‘Pretty please give us access.’ ”

 ?? ED KAISER / POSTMEDIA ?? Peter Downing, a founder of the Western separatist movement, is being challenged on his assertion that resources will have access to the coast.
ED KAISER / POSTMEDIA Peter Downing, a founder of the Western separatist movement, is being challenged on his assertion that resources will have access to the coast.

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