Trans Mountain controversy not over yet
Work has started but industry leaders still worried about pipeline’s progress amid unresolved issues
Construction crews remain busy driving piles for new facilities at Trans Mountain’s Westridge marine terminal on Burrard Inlet and clearing land at the Burnaby Mountain terminus of its pipeline, but industry leaders remain apprehensive about the expansion project.
“Everyone is guarded about what does this mean,” said Chris Gardner, president of the Independent Contractors and Business Association about last week’s announcement that construction on the $7.4-billion project had officially restarted.
“Are we stopping and starting and stopping and starting,” Gardner said. “There has been so much uncertainty, there is definitely a degree of skepticism about some of these announcements and activity we see.”
Last Tuesday’s announcement near Edmonton by Trans Mountain CEO Ian Anderson, accompanied by new Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’Regan and Alberta Energy Minister Sonya Savage, marked the restart of putting new pipe in the ground for the twinned pipeline.
That touched off what Anderson said would be a 22-month timeline to have the twinned facility, nearly tripling its capacity to 890,000 barrels of oil per day, in service by late 2022, although the overall project is not any less contentious among its opponents.
However, in Burnaby, about 100 trucks per day are moving in and out of Trans Mountain’s terminal site, said project spokeswoman Ali Hounsell, as crews continue with clearing and stripping ground for expansion of its tank facilities and new water treatment system. “It’s a busy, busy construction site,” Hounsell said. “Things are happening,” and have been happening since August following the federal government’s re-approval of the project in June.
At last count, Hounsell said Trans Mountain and its prime contractors have hired 2,200 workers for the project.
At Trans Mountain’s Westridge Marine terminal, Hounsell said two barges are on site and have driven 25 of the 160 piles that will support expansion of the foreshore facilities for three new docks for loading ships.
The project’s initial federal approval in 2018 was scrapped by the Federal Court of Appeal over inadequate consultation with First Nations, delaying construction by about a year.
Hounsell said that with a new approval in June, Trans Mountain has had to re-file plans for all landowners to also be re-approved and deal with any outstanding complaints.
As far as putting new pipe in the ground is concerned, while Anderson promised that would begin “before Christmas,” it will be later into 2020 before that work starts in earnest in B.C.
The actual pipeline construction has been broken up into seven separate segments, referred to as spreads in industry jargon. The first two of those are in Alberta, the rest are in B.C. with Spread 7, the final section, running through the Lower Mainland.
Gardner said the contractor on that section hasn’t mobilized a workforce for the work yet.
The Federal Court of Appeal, in a decision in September, ruled that six First Nations could file new legal challenges of the Trans Mountain project on the question of whether the federal government has fulfilled its obligation to consult with First Nations.
Trans Mountain has signed 57 impact benefit agreements with First Nations along the pipeline’s route. However Judy Wilson, secretary treasurer for the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs and Chief of the Neskonlith First Nation in B.C.’s interior, said those agreements should only be in effect on federal First Nations reserve lands, not territorial lands outside of reserves.
Wilson argued that Aboriginal title to territorial land still rests with the First Nations families associated with those areas, not Band Councils, and government hasn’t received their consent, under the principles of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.”