Times Colonist

First Nation asks court to stop Trans Mountain

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VANCOUVER — A First Nation in North Vancouver has mounted a legal challenge that it says could send the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion “back to the drawing board” if successful.

Lawyers for the Tsleil-Waututh Nation are asking the Federal Court of Appeal to stop the National Energy Board’s review of the $5.4-billion project, which they say began without their client being consulted by the federal government.

“What we’ve asked the court to do is to recognize the flaws in the starting of the process, the process itself, the legal errors that the NEB has made and, really, to stop the process and send it back to the drawing board,” said Eugene Kung, staff counsel with West Coast Environmen­tal Law.

The Trans Mountain pipeline currently ships 300,000 barrels a day of petroleum products from Alberta to the West Coast. Its owner, Kinder Morgan, aims to nearly triple its capacity, enabling oilsands crude to be shipped by tanker to Asia.

The Tsleil-Waututh are among various groups opposed to the project, citing environmen­tal and public-health risks and little benefit to the economy.

Rueben George, project manager with the Tsleil-Waututh’s Sacred Trust Initiative, said the outgoing Conservati­ve gov- ernment created a “catastroph­ic mess” with changes it made to environmen­tal oversight and he’s optimistic things will change under the new Liberal government.

Many critics have slammed the regulatory review process for being skewed in favour of industry and for not taking into account the pipeline’s role in enabling more oilsands developmen­t — and the increased carbon emissions that would result.

The NEB postponed hearings in August after striking economic evidence prepared by a consultant who was to begin working for the regulator starting this month. Steven Kelly won’t be involved in the Trans Mountain assessment, but the NEB nonetheles­s said it wanted to ensure no questions were raised about the review’s integrity.

Kinder Morgan has said the project underwent “unpreceden­ted” scrutiny inside and outside the formal review process and would add $18 billion to Canada’s gross domestic product over 20 years. “Trans Mountain deeply respects aboriginal rights and title in Canada and we acknowledg­e the Crown’s responsibi­lity to consult with representa­tives of the First Nations. For more than three years we have been engaging in meaningful consultati­on and to date Trans Mountain has consulted with 133 aboriginal and First Nations Groups,” the company said.

 ??  ?? An oil tanker arrives for loading at Kinder Morgan’s facility in Burnaby.
An oil tanker arrives for loading at Kinder Morgan’s facility in Burnaby.

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