Truro News

Saskatchew­an premier says his province will also table oil ban bill

-

Premier Scott Moe says Saskatchew­an will join Alberta in a fight with B.C. over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion by introducin­g its own legislatio­n on oil exports.

Moe says his government will bring in a bill in the coming days that could result in less oil moving to British Columbia.

“We do ship some energy products to British Columbia but not a huge amount. The majority of the energy products that are shipped to British Columbia come from Alberta,” said Moe in Regina.

“What we’re saying is if they (Alberta) turn off those taps, Saskatchew­an won’t be here to fill those (B.C.) fuel tanks.”

Moe said he wants the legislatio­n passed in the current session of the legislatur­e so that it can work in tandem with Alberta’s legislatio­n.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley’s government introduced a law on Monday that would give the province power to unilateral­ly reduce exports of oil and natural gas.

The bill aims to give the energy minister authority to intervene in the market, via direct licences to companies, to decide when and how certain oil and natural gas products are exported.

Moe said his bill is still being worked on, but it is likely to involve a similar permitting process.

“That’s something that we would look at very closely, and if not mirroring (Alberta’s bill) being something similar.”

Alberta and B.C. have been at odds over the Trans Mountain project, which was approved in 2016 but has been hamstrung by court challenges and permit delays in B.C.

Alberta says the expansion is critical to reduce bottleneck­s that cost Canada $40 million a day in lost revenue, but B.C. says it remains concerned about potential oil spills on its waterways and coastline.

The future of the $7.4-billion project is uncertain. Earlier this month, pipeline-builder Kinder Morgan announced it was ratcheting back spending on it, because the actions of the B. C. government have sown investor uncertaint­y.

Kinder Morgan has set a deadline of May 31 to get a tangible sign from Canada that the project can and will be completed.

Alberta and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government are discussing taking an equity stake in the pipeline to ensure it gets done. Moe said he’s not concerned that the bills might result in court challenges and fines as a breach of free-trade rules.

He said it’s an unusual and unfortunat­e situation that began with B.C. interferin­g in a federally approved interprovi­ncial pipeline.

“We hope it doesn’t come to this. We truly don’t. This is not a conversati­on we want to be having,” he said.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Scott Moe
CP PHOTO Scott Moe

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada