The Daily Courier

No more concession­s on pipeline

Kinder Morgan Canada president doesn’t expect Trans Mountain project to be delayed or shelved

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TORONTO — Kinder Morgan Canada won’t make further concession­s on its Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, the company’s president said Friday, setting the stage for a showdown with British Columbia’s potential government-in-waiting.

Ian Anderson said he is willing to meet with the provincial NDP and Greens, who have vowed to immediatel­y stop the $7.4-billion developmen­t should they oust the Liberals from power through an alliance.

But moments after toasting Kinder Morgan Canada’s debut earlier this week on the Toronto Stock Exchange, Anderson had a blunt message for the two parties.

“We’ll continue to listen,” Anderson said after opening the market Friday morning.

“But I don’t have any concession­s planned for any further discussion at this point.”

B.C. Green Leader Andrew Weaver said in a statement he’d be delighted to meet with Anderson to discuss his concerns, adding he served as an intervener in the National Energy Board process and felt he didn’t get satisfacto­ry answers to some problems he posed.

“I have been clear on my position that B.C. cannot afford the risks associated with the transporta­tion of diluted bitumen in our coastal waters,” Weaver said.

The majority of voters in the province recently sided with parties opposed to Trans Mountain, he added.

The NDP and Greens formalized an alliance earlier this week to form B.C.’s next government after the Liberal party failed to secure a majority in the May 9 election. The Liberals won 43 seats, the NDP 41 and the Greens three.

The provincial NDP did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

The Trans Mountain expansion, which already has federal approval, could begin constructi­on in September. The project would see a current pipeline that runs from Edmonton to Burnaby twinned, effectivel­y tripling its capacity to 890,000 barrels per day.

Despite the uncertain political environmen­t in B.C. — not to mention myriad protests and legal challenges — Anderson brushed off concerns the project would be delayed and said he doesn’t see any possibilit­y of it being shelved.

“I’m not foreseeing any, any difficulty in the constructi­on start this fall,” he said.

The company will be respectful of peaceful protests, he added, calling them “fair game for anybody.”

However, if people choose to break the law, Kinder Morgan will have the authoritie­s take care of it, he said.

“We are well-prepared.”

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