The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Pipeline to prosperity and stability

First Nations support pipelines, including Trans Mountain, so abandoning the project will be a severe blow to those communitie­s

- BY JOSEPH QUESNEL AND KENNETH GREEN Joseph Quesnel is a senior fellow, Kenneth Green is senior director of natural resource studies, with the Fraser Institute.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley forgot one group of Canadians when she cheered a recent court ruling relating to the $7.4-billion Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.

“It wasn’t that we won the decision, it was the court wouldn’t even hear it. So, it was a pretty definitive victory for the pipeline and for the people of Alberta and Canada,” Notley said after the Federal Court of Appeal declined to hear appeals to overturn the National Energy Board’s decision on the pipeline.

However, the premier forgot to mention First Nations people along the pipeline route. Yes, they are Canadians and residents of Alberta, but under our legal system, resource companies must consult and make accommodat­ions specifical­ly with these affected First Nation communitie­s.

The Trans Mountain pipeline expansion remains in limbo, with its future in serious doubt.

For now, it’s been halted by Kinder Morgan due to “extraordin­ary political risks that are completely outside of our control and that could prevent completion” of the project.

And crucially, the common pipeline narrative in the Canadian media often ignores the overwhelmi­ng evidence that many Indigenous communitie­s favour responsibl­e developmen­t of fossil fuels on their territorie­s. Environmen­tal groups have created a distorted image that many (if not all) First Nations oppose developmen­t, which is quite contrary to the evidence.

In a co-written report by the British Columbia government and the First Nations LNG Alliance (how many Canadians know such an organizati­on exists?), the authors express the frustratio­n of many First Nation communitie­s over delays in the Trans Mountain project. Naturally, they also view LNG (liquefied natural gas) projects as instrument­al to jobs and training in their communitie­s.

So, like other British Columbians, they’re upset about these delays and the potential death of the project.

Why then don’t we hear these Indigenous voices more fully represente­d in the media?

Probably because they don’t blockade roads or stage sit-ins, but rather negotiate calmly on behalf of their communitie­s while thinking about the future.

This recent court victory comes on the heels of a Senate motion, which was unanimousl­y passed, calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to throw his political weight behind the Trans Mountain expansion.

Clearly, Indigenous communitie­s stand to lose a great deal if Trans Mountain dies on the vine. According to company sources, 51 First Nation communitie­s have signed comprehens­ive mutual benefit agreements with the pipeline project worth more than $400 million.

That’s 41 agreements in B.C. and 10 in Alberta — including every First Nation on land where the pipeline crosses and 80 per cent of First Nation communitie­s in proximity to the pipeline’s right-of-way. In other words, Indigenous communitie­s closest to the project and its impact are onboard.

If the pipeline expansion doesn’t proceed, these agreements with First Nations also die, depriving these communitie­s of mutually agreed upon benefits, including muchneeded jobs, training, education, skills enhancemen­t and improved community services and infrastruc­ture. The agreements also include procuremen­t deals with affected First Nations so they can participat­e in the economic benefits from the developmen­t.

Incendiary headlines of protest notwithsta­nding, the real story of the proposed Trans Mountain expansion (if the project happens) is the largescale Indigenous-corporate cooperatio­n and engagement on resource developmen­t. It could serve as a model for other forms of First Nation economic developmen­t.

The reality on the ground, where the project is planned, counters the environmen­talist propaganda that First Nations oppose resource developmen­t.

Unfortunat­ely, Canadians don’t hear enough about Indigenous communitie­s that have signed deals with companies to develop resources in a safe, environmen­tally-friendly way. Those success stories must be heard for Canadians to correctly understand the situation.

The derailing of 51 mutual benefit agreements with First Nations would be horrible for impoverish­ed communitie­s that lack stable economies.

It would also represent a backward step on the path to responsibl­e co-operation between resource companies and Indigenous communitie­s.

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