Penticton Herald

Trudeau to talk turkey and Trans Mountain with B.C., Alberta

- By MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — The federal government needs more face time with the players in the Trans Mountain pipeline impasse to push the controvers­ial expansion project forward, says Finance Minister Bill Morneau — a sentiment his boss obliged in dramatic fashion Thursday, moments before jetting off to Peru.

The door to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Airbus was barely closed before word emerged he’d be back in Ottawa on Sunday to meet with the warring premiers.

Trudeau is to meet with the premiers of Alberta and B.C., hoping to rescue the $7.4billion project and defuse one of the most politicall­y perilous crises of his time in office.

The government has every legal right to press ahead with the expansion, but the road blocks being thrown up by B.C. Premier John Horgan — emboldened by environmen­tal groups — demand more talks with the provinces and pipeline architect Kinder Morgan, Morneau said in Toronto.

“Certainly there are legal and regulatory obstacles that have been creating financial risks to this project, and we need to consider how we as a federal government can absolutely assure that this moves forward,” he said.

“We will be considerin­g all options.”

Trudeau will sit down Sunday in Ottawa with Horgan and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley — a diversion from his original itinerary, which had him flying directly to Europe from Peru, where he’s attending the eighth Summit of the Americas, beginning Friday.

Trudeau has held several phone conversati­ons with both leaders in recent days and weeks — two with each just recently, officials said Thursday — but critics have been pushing him for an in-person meeting, particular­ly with Horgan, whose opposition is the main reason for Kinder Morgan’s cold feet.

Horgan has pledged to do whatever it takes to kill the pipeline; earlier this year, he floated the idea of a regulation that would limit how much oil could flow through it. Ottawa has jurisdicti­on over pipeline projects, but a legal challenge on that score would mean more delays.

B.C. is also party to a lawsuit that alleges Ottawa failed to properly consult Indigenous communitie­s.

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