The Peterborough Examiner

Energy regulator to unveil details of new Trans Mountain hearings to define final route

- CLAUDIA CATTANEO POSTMEDIAN­ETWORK Financial Post, with files from Canadian Press ccattaneo@nationalpo­st.com

The National Energy Board is expected to announce Thursday details of hearings to narrow down the route of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, even as constructi­on is set to start in September in segments where regulatory requiremen­ts have been met.

Meanwhile, the NE B said ina letter late Tuesday to project proponent Kinder Morgan Canada that it has now met all but one condition – an environmen­tal protection plan — to start constructi­on at its Westridge Marine Terminal in Burnaby. That’s the first location where the company, which has proposed a phased or staggered approach, plans to start building the controvers­ial $7.4 billion project.

“Public safety and the protection of the environmen­t is of paramount importance to the NE B, and will hold Trans Mountain accountabl­e for its performanc­e during the constructi­on and operation of this project, including full compliance with all regulatory requiremen­ts and commitment­s,” the regulator said to the company.

Last week, the NEB warned Kinder Morgan Canada that it could not start constructi­on at Westridge because only 27 out of 49 conditions had been met.

“We’ re confident that we’ ll meet the additional compliance requiremen­ts so that we can begin constructi­on in September ,” the company said in an emailed statement.

Different segments of the Alberta-to-Burnaby project will have different constructi­on starts, the company said.

The detailed route hearings are expected to begin in the fall and take several months, the NEB said in a letter last week to Jim Carr, the federal natural resources minister.

The NEB received 452 statements of opposition related to the proposed route, including five from indigenous groups and 121 from landowners.

The plan is unfolding in the face of out rage from British Columbia’ s new NDP government, which has vowed to use all available tools to stop the pipeline expansion, and threats of large demonstrat­ions from environmen­tal organizati­ons and indigenous communitie­s. Andrew Weaver, leader of the B.C. Greens, whose support is needed by the NDP to stay in power, has promised: “Trans Mountain will never be built.”

Trans Mountain applied in 2012 to twin the existing 1,147-kilometre Trans Mountain pipeline system and provide a new market for Alberta oil in Asia. The project includes new and modified pump stations and tanks, and additional tanker loading facilities at the Westridge terminal. The project would increase Trans Mountain’s shipping capacity from 300,000 barrels a day to 890,000. The majority of the new pipeline would be adjacent to the existing pipeline or along existing corridors. Kind er Morgan expects to complete the expansion in 2019.

Kinder Morgan filed a security plan with the NEB in May to protect its activities.

“The company needs to have an adequate constructi­on security program in place, and is responsibl­e in implementi­ng that program ,” said NEB official James Stevenson. “Security is clearly within the NEB’s mandate, and our role is to have regulatory oversight on the company’ s program to ensure that it is meeting the NE B’ s requiremen­ts.”

Meanwhile, the project faces a parallel legal hurdle — a judicial review by the Federal Court of Appeal of last November’s federal cabinet approval, which came with 157 conditions. Hearings are scheduled to get underway in Vancouver Oct. 2 to Oct. 13.

Several First Nations and municipali­ties have joined the legal challenge. The court ruled Tuesday that it would also allow the B.C. government to participat­e as an intervenor.

However, because the province applied late and missed the initial deadline of April 13, it will have to meet the same Sept. 1 deadline to submit a 15-page document of facts that the Alberta government, which supports the project, had months to prepare. The court also prohibited B.C. from introducin­g new issues or evidence and ruled the province must pay $7,500 to Trans Mountain for having to prepare a late response to the arguments.

B.C.’s Environmen­t Minister George Heyman said his government welcomes the decision.

“We will continue to defend B.C.’s coast and the economic and environmen­tal interests that are so important to British Col um bi ans ,” he said in a news release.

Last month, Heyman said only three of eight environmen­tal management plans required by the province have been accepted and that it’s unlikely those remaining will get approval before work was to start because the company didn’t adequately consult First Nations.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Pipes are seen at the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain facility in Edmonton, Alta., on April 6.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Pipes are seen at the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain facility in Edmonton, Alta., on April 6.

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