Times Colonist

B.C. vows to sue over fuel supply threat

- DIRK MEISSNER — With files from Gemma Karstens-Smith

All sides in the escalating dispute over the Trans Mountain expansion project appear to be digging in with the Alberta and British Columbia government­s clashing over fuel prices, and Indigenous and political leaders warning of civil unrest.

Tensions escalated Monday with B.C. Attorney General David Eby threatenin­g to sue Alberta over legislatio­n it introduced to restrict the flow of oil, gasoline and natural gas leaving that province, which could boost fuel prices in B.C.

“The immediate recourse that’s available to us is to potentiall­y sue the Alberta government for an unconstitu­tional piece of legislatio­n,” he said.

Eby said he can’t predict gasoline prices — now at about $1.46 per litre for regular in Greater Victoria — but “what I can say is any concern British Columbians have that a bill that preferenti­ally punishes B.C. from the Alberta perspectiv­e and tries to drive up gas prices would be unconstitu­tional and we would take action immediatel­y to address that.”

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said the legislatio­n sends the message that Alberta is prepared to defend its resources.

It would direct pipeline companies, truckers and rail operators on how much oil product they ship and when. Violators would face fines of up to $1 million a day for individual­s and $10 million a day for corporatio­ns.

The legislatio­n is the latest manoeuvre in the ongoing dispute over the pipeline project that has the federal and Alberta government­s supporting the pipeline expansion project, while B.C. opposes it, saying it is defending its coast from a potentiall­y catastroph­ic spill.

In November 2016, the federal government approved the 1,700-kilometre pipeline expansion, starting near Edmonton and ending at Burnaby, saying the pipeline is in the national interest. Alberta said the $7.4-billion pipeline gives the province access to overseas markets.

But the B.C. government says the expansion and seven-fold increase in oil tanker traffic in coastal waters poses environmen­tal and economic risks that are too great. The province is preparing to ask the courts to determine who has jurisdicti­on over the pipeline in the province.

Kinder Morgan announced this month it is pulling back on spending for the project and gave Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government until May 31 to give a clear signal the project will proceed.

Trudeau, Notley and B.C. Premier John Horgan met Sunday in Ottawa to discuss the pipeline, but emerged from the meeting deadlocked. Trudeau repeated the federal government’s commitment to ensuring the project’s completion and announced his government was preparing to hold private financial talks with Kinder Morgan.

Indigenous leaders, who were not invited to the meeting in Ottawa, joined with representa­tives of the cities of Vancouver and Burnaby on Monday to redouble their opposition to the pipeline.

Stewart Phillip, grand chief of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, said opposition is broad-based and entrenched. “It’s a stinker of an idea. It’s a stinker of a proposal and it will be defeated.”

Phillip said resistance to Trans Mountain isn’t just from Indigenous Peoples, but people of all background­s from across Canada.

So far, about 200 people have been arrested at protests near the pipeline terminal site in Burnaby.

Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan said he expected civil disobedien­ce against the pipeline to grow. He said he’s embarrasse­d Canada’s prime minister and the Alberta premier are kowtowing to an American multinatio­nal oil company. “I think if people totally lose faith in our democratic system, if they believe that the federal government has been able to impose its will, that they’ve ignored the court proceeding­s, then I think we’re looking for chaos,” said Corrigan. “And that’s what worries me.”

B.C.’s prosecutio­n service announced Monday it would consider criminal contempt of court charges against protesters alleged to have broken a court injunction while demonstrat­ing near the pipeline constructi­on site.

The service said it had appointed a special prosecutor in the cases of Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, MP for Saanich Gulf Islands, and New Democrat Burnaby South MP Kennedy Stewart, who were arrested for protesting at the site.

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