Vancouver Sun

PIPELINE REVIEW ORDERED

Another hurdle for Kinder Morgan

- GORDON HOEKSTRA ghoekstra@vancouvers­un.com twitter/gordon_hoekstra

Kinder Morgan’s $5.4-billion Trans Mountain pipeline expansion has another hurdle to overcome.

It now must undergo a provincial review, the B.C. Environmen­tal Assessment Office ordered this month.

The call for a provincial assessment comes as a result of a B.C. Supreme Court ruling in January that found the province could not rely on an equivalenc­y agreement signed between the federal government and the B.C. government that allowed a National Energy Board (NEB) review of the project to substitute for the provincial as- sessment.

The province decided not to appeal the decision.

The case had been brought by the Coastal First Nations and the Gitga’at First Nation against the B.C. government over Enbridge’s $7.9-billion Northern Gateway project. The First Nations challenged the validity of the equivalenc­y agreement and also claimed the province had failed to adequately consult them before entering the agreement.

A similar equivalenc­y agreement was signed for Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline project.

The project to tap into new Asian markets will triple capacity and in- crease the number of tankers calling at its Burnaby terminal nearly sevenfold, to 400 a year.

In a letter to Kinder Morgan, Kevin Jardine, B.C. Environmen­tal Assessment Office associate deputy minister, said the province will still accept the NEB’s review as the province’s assessment report.

A decision on the Trans Mountain project from the NEB is expected by May 20.

But Jardine told Kinder Morgan that the Environmen­tal Assessment Office will have to consult with First Nations to determine how the project will affect them on their aboriginal rights and whether any additional accommodat­ion may be required.

It will also review and evaluate the consultati­on to date.

It’s unclear exactly what the provincial consultati­on requiremen­t will mean — or whether it will delay the project — as normally First Nation involvemen­t in provincial reviews is comprehens­ive and includes defining the issues to be reviewed.

While some First Nations, particular­ly in the Interior, have offered support for the Trans Mountain expansion, some southern coastal First Nations, including the Tsleil-Waututh, are opposed to the project.

There is no timeline on considerin­g the NEB report, consultati­ons with First Nations and considerat­ion of any additional informatio­n, B.C. Ministry of Environmen­t spokesman David Karn said in an email.

“The timing of next steps are dependent on the proponent’s readiness to proceed,” he said.

In a written response to The Van- couver Sun, Kinder Morgan did not answer whether it believes the provincial review will cause a delay in the project or increase costs.

Kinder Morgan spokeswoma­n Ali Hounsell said the order for the provincial review was expected as a result of the court ruling.

“It presents an opportunit­y for Trans Mountain to ensure the proposed project is meeting the province’s environmen­tal requiremen­ts while addressing concerns of First Nation communitie­s,” Hounsell said in an email. “We look forward to working co-operativel­y with the EAO through this review process and we are confident that our ongoing consultati­on will earn the required Environmen­tal Assessment Certificat­e.”

Robin Junger, a lawyer with McMillan LLP in Vancouver who specialize­s in aboriginal and environmen­tal law, said the federal review process is likely to be relied on, but there is now a host of questions about how exactly does the province consult with First Nations, considerin­g the federal review is nearly complete.

It’s not simply a question of asking First Nations to comment on a report, said Junger, a former head of the EAO in B.C.

“First Nations are consulted all the way through, from the decision on whether to do anything, in the procedural orders, into the determinat­ion of what informatio­n is required, and they are part of a working group,” noted Junger.

It presents an opportunit­y for Trans Mountain to ensure the proposed project is meeting the province’s environmen­tal requiremen­ts while addressing concerns of First Nation communitie­s.

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 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Patricia Kelly of the Sto:lo First Nation, chants and beats a drum during a protest in January outside National Energy Board hearings in Burnaby on the proposed Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion. The proposed $5-billion project by Kinder Morgan...
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Patricia Kelly of the Sto:lo First Nation, chants and beats a drum during a protest in January outside National Energy Board hearings in Burnaby on the proposed Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion. The proposed $5-billion project by Kinder Morgan...

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