Times Colonist

Energy board might override Burnaby

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OTTAWA — The National Energy Board said it will not expedite the process to determine if the city of Burnaby is deliberate­ly obstructin­g constructi­on of the expanded Trans Mountain Pipeline by refusing to issue necessary constructi­on permits.

The board said a three-member panel will hold hearings Nov. 29 and Dec. 4 to decide if the agency should use its power to override Burnaby’s authority to prevent constructi­on.

Kinder Morgan, the U.S. company that owns Trans Mountain, complained to the NEB last month that it hadn’t been able to secure the permits it needs and believed the city was intentiona­lly slowing constructi­on.

The company wanted the NEB to decide by Nov. 10, based only on written submission­s, but the regulator has given provincial government­s until Nov. 24 to make a written submission and then will hold two hearings to decide the matter.

The federal government last year approved an expansion of the pipeline that runs between Edmonton and Burnaby, to nearly triple the amount of heavy crude flowing through it to almost 900,000 barrels a day.

Burnaby has expressed opposition to the project, and on Monday the city’s lawyer demanded Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall retract accusation­s the city was deliberate­ly slowing the project, which Wall refuses to do.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A kayaker paddles past the Kinder Morgan tank yard in Burrard Inlet in Burnaby.
JONATHAN HAYWARD, THE CANADIAN PRESS A kayaker paddles past the Kinder Morgan tank yard in Burrard Inlet in Burnaby.

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