Penticton Herald

No oil an old shell game

Notley threat to cut off oil not a new tactic

- By DAN HEALING

The Canadian Press

CALGARY — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley’s threat to reduce oil shipments to other provinces, the latest salvo in a recent pipeline dispute with British Columbia, carries on a provincial tradition of using its natural resources to reinforce its political positions.

The energy-rich province has used its oil and gas exports as leverage at least three times in the past to win arguments with other levels of government, oilpatch historian and author David Finch said Friday.

“Because the ... premier represents the people of Alberta as owners of the natural resource, there’s always more at stake on these issues and the Alberta perspectiv­e is always different than the Ottawa perspectiv­e,” he said.

Notley on Thursday said she would, if pushed, replicate the actions of former premier Peter Lougheed who in 1980-81 reduced oil flows over several months and cancelled two oilsands developmen­ts after the federal Liberals brought in the national energy program with its price controls, new taxes and revenue sharing.

Finch said ex-premier Ernest Manning “flexed his muscles” and sent a shipment of natural gas to Montana in 1951 to assert the province’s right to control its exports. And thenAlbert­a energy minister Don Getty reduced natural gas shipments to Ontario in 1975 to protest federal policies he felt were discouragi­ng establishi­ng a petrochemi­cal industry in the West.

Alberta has been locked in an inter-provincial dispute with its western neighbour over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion. It became more heated earlier this year when B.C. said it would not allow increased oil flow until more research is completed on pipeline safety and spill response — B.C. backed down after Alberta suspended imports of B.C. wine.

The Alberta government still has the legal right to restrict exports of oil and gas by withholdin­g “removal permits,” said Bob Skinner, executive fellow with the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary, whose career has included stints in the federal energy department, industry and academia.

However, he said there’s a “very low chance” that Notley will actually implement export cuts because her threat echoes a previous suggestion by Opposition United Conservati­ve Leader Jason Kenney, who could be the next premier.

“She does not have to do it because what she’s done is take an arrow from the quiver of Jason Kenney, so the signal to British Columbia and Premier (John) Horgan is, ‘If you think I’m a toughie, just you wait. I’m offering you a basis for negotiatio­n. I don’t think you’ll get that if somebody else is here.”’

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday that the Alberta-B.C. dispute over Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain expansion plans isn’t the first time provinces have disagreed on a project, adding that it’s important the federal government show leadership now.

“What I have been very clear about is that this project is in the national interest and it will get built,” Trudeau said in Regina.

The Trudeau government approved the Kinder Morgan project in 2016, but the pipeline has since faced permit fights and challenges from the B.C. government.

The $7.9-billion expansion would triple the amount of Alberta crude going from Edmonton to the port in Burnaby, B.C.

Any reduction in shipments through the existing Trans Mountain line would likely affect operations of the 55,000-barrel-per-day Burnaby, B.C., refinery owned by Alberta-based Parkland Fuel Corp., which bought it from Chevron in November.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Alberta Premier Rachel Notley shakes hands before the Speech from the Throne in Edmonton on Thursday.
The Canadian Press Alberta Premier Rachel Notley shakes hands before the Speech from the Throne in Edmonton on Thursday.

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