Bangkok Post

Canadian govt buys troubled oil pipeline

- ROB GILLIES

TORONTO: Canada’s federal government said on Tuesday that it would buy a controvers­ial pipeline from the Alberta oil sands to the Pacific Coast to ensure it gets built.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government plans to spend C$4.5 billion (US$3.4 billion) to purchase Kinder Morgan Inc’s Trans Mountain pipeline.

The pipeline expansion would triple the capacity of an existing line to ship oil extracted from the oil sands in Alberta across the snow-capped peaks of the Canadian Rockies. It would end at a terminal outside Vancouver, resulting in a sevenfold increase in the number of tankers in the shared waters between Canada and Washington state.

Facing stiff environmen­tal opposition from British Columbia’s provincial government and activists, Houston-based Kinder Morgan earlier halted essential spending on the project and said it would cancel it altogether if the national and provincial government­s could not guarantee it.

“It must be built and it will be built,” Finance Minister Bill Morneau said.

The pipeline would allow Canada to diversify and vastly increase exports to Asia, where it could command a higher price.

Canada has the world’s third-largest oil reserves but 99% of its exports now go to refiners in the US, where limits on pipeline and refinery capacity mean Canadian oil sells at a discount.

“For too long we have relied on one trading partner for our oil and gas exports,” Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr said.

The project has pitted oil-rich Alberta against coastal British Columbia, where concerns about fisheries, real estate values, tourism and ocean ecology are high. Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson calls the pipeline an unacceptab­le risk that threatens 10,000 jobs in the harbor.

Indigenous leaders and environmen­talists have pledged to do whatever necessary to thwart the pipeline, including chaining themselves to constructi­on equipment.

“If it means standing up for the land against bulldozers or the military, we have to do that,” Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs spokeswoma­n Chief Judy Wilson said aboriginal.

The Trans Mountain expansion is projected to lead to a tanker traffic balloon from about 60 to more than 400 vessels annually as the pipeline flow increases from 300,000 to 890,000 barrels per day.

Morneau called the purchase an “exceptiona­l situation” and said the government didn’t intend to be a long-term owner of the pipeline.

The government is buying the existing pipeline and the scheduled twinned pipeline expansion.

Steve Kean, chairman and chief executive of Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd, said the deal represente­d the best opportunit­y to complete the expansion project.

“We’ve agreed to a fair price for our shareholde­rs and we’ve found a way forward for this national interest project,” he said.

Analysts have said China is eager to get access to Canada’s oil, but largely gave up hope that a pipeline to the Pacific coast would be built.

Trudeau approved the expansion, arguing that it was “economical­ly necessary” and enabled him to overcome opposition to a carbon tax plan that will help Canada cut its greenhouse emissions.

But many indigenous people see the 620 miles (1,000 kilometres) of new pipeline as a threat to their lands, echoing concerns raised by Native Americans about the Keystone XL project in the US.

Many in Canada say it also raises broader environmen­tal concerns by enabling increased developmen­t of the carbonheav­y oil sands.

More than 200 people, including two members of Parliament, have been arrested already at Kinder Morgan’s oil tanker and terminal site in Burnaby, British Columbia.

“I’m worried about the catastroph­ic consequenc­es should there be a spill, regardless of the owner, and will continue to fight it in court,’’ British Columbia Premier John Horgan said.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley cheered the news of the federal government’s purchase on Twitter. “This project has more certainty than ever before. We won’t stop until the job is done!”

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP THE ?? This photo shows an aerial view of Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain marine terminal in Burnaby, British Columbia on Tuesday.
CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP THE This photo shows an aerial view of Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain marine terminal in Burnaby, British Columbia on Tuesday.

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