Calgary Herald

Ottawa flagged safety concerns about Enbridge pipeline project

‘Insufficie­nt’ oil spill response plan cited at 2010 meeting: document

- MIKE DE SOUZA

Federal officials flagged safety concerns about Enbridge’s proposed Northern Gateway pipeline project nearly two years ago, while warning that the Alberta-based proponent had an “insufficie­nt” oil spill response plan along sensitive areas on its route from Alberta to the British Columbia coast, internal records reveal.

The warnings were highlighte­d during a meeting by a team of environmen­tal assessment experts from multiple government department­s, including Natural Resources Canada, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Environmen­t Canada, Transport Canada and Aboriginal and Northern Affairs Canada.

A spokeswoma­n for Enbridge said an updated oil spill response plan, submitted in March 2011 to a panel reviewing the project, provides updated informatio­n that the government would not have known about at the time of the meeting.

But representa­tives from Aboriginal and Northern Affairs Canada, formerly known as Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, expressed concerns that Enbridge gave “insufficie­nt informatio­n on the general oil spill response plan and pipeline route through reserve lands,” said notes from the Nov. 25, 2010 meeting, released by the fisheries department through access to informatio­n legislatio­n.

The teleconfer­ence came a few months after federal biologists expressed concerns that Enbridge was not making significan­t efforts to avoid “sensitive areas” along approximat­ely 1,000 waterways crossed on the proposed route.

One fisheries department scientist said that in some cases, Enbridge was “pushing for the cheapest option,” the Vancouver Sun and Postmedia News reported last week.

Representa­tives from all department­s reached a “general consensus” at the November 2010 meeting that “Enbridge had not submitted enough informatio­n on the pipeline route,” noting that its proposed one- kilometre corridor was too broad for an adequate evaluation of areas of concern.

Officials from Natural Resources Canada also expressed concerns at the meeting about “preliminar­y management and safety plans for (the) operation of (the) pipeline,” as well as a lack of informatio­n on the company’s land and water resource management plan. Environmen­t Canada representa­tives also raised concerns that the company needed to do more research regarding wildlife potentiall­y affected by

(Enbridge was) pushing for the cheapest option.

A FISHERIES DEPARTMENT SCIENTIST

the project.

The Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Affairs Department was not immediatel­y able to say whether Enbridge had addressed all of its concerns. The federal government also was warned in November 2010 that the courts could overrule the review process of the project because of “unreasonab­le” consultati­on with aboriginal communitie­s.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty responded in its last budget by offering $13.6 million over two years to the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency to support consultati­ons with aboriginal communitie­s.

The Harper government, which had been heavily lobbied by Enbridge over concerns about DFO demands, tabled Fisheries Act amendments in its budget implementa­tion legislatio­n, Bill C-38, in April.

Those changes, which according to critics would “gut” DFO’s ability to protect habitat, became a flashpoint in the opposition’s battle against C-38.

A spokesman from Natural Resources Canada, Paul Duchesne, said department specialist­s were doing their job prior to making formal informatio­n requests that the company responded to in October and November of 2011.

He said the department subsequent­ly recommende­d, through a government submission to the review panel in December 2011, that Enbridge make commitment­s for “additional studies and considerat­ions during detailed design and project implementa­tion.”

These requests must now be addressed by the panel.

At a cost of about $7 billion, the Northern Gateway Pipeline would be nearly 1,200 kilometres in length from Edmonton to Kitimat on the west coast of British Columbia. It would carry an average of 525,000 barrels of petroleum per day to the west, and an average of 193,000 barrels of condensate, used to thin petroleum products for pipeline transport, per day to the east.

The proposed pipeline, crossing through B.C.’s Great Bear Rainforest, would also benefit oilsands companies, opening the door to new markets in Asia, allowing them to sell their heavy oil at higher prices than they now get from U.S. markets. But internal records also have suggested that the shipping routes of oil tankers that would transport the oil from the coasts could threaten critical habitat of species such as humpback whales and fin whales.

Enbridge’s March 2011 oil spill response plan indicated that the company was meeting or exceeding Canadian standards and that further operationa­l spill response plans would be completed six months before the commission­ing of the project with appropriat­e details to support the “emergency response along the right-of-way of the pipeline and its shipping routes in Canadian waters.”

Enbridge’s director of corporate and business communicat­ions, Jennifer Varey, said that the company always has had an “aggressive emergency response” drill and training program with comprehens­ive plans in place to respond to spills. She said the company also created a special cross-business response team in 2011.

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