Calgary Herald

Budget bill puts pipeline ‘top of mind’

- MIKE DE SOUZA

Pipeline developmen­t was a “top of mind” considerat­ion factoring into the Harper government’s regulatory reforms adopted in a 400-page piece of legislatio­n supporting the 2012 budget, reveals an internal briefing note prepared for Environmen­t Minister Peter Kent.

The federal document, marked “secret” but released through access to informatio­n legislatio­n by Environmen­t Canada, highlighte­d the department’s role in assessing two different proposals for pipelines linking Alberta’s oilsands industry to the west coast of British Columbia.

It also recommende­d that Kent tell a pipeline industry associatio­n, before the budget was tabled, that the new legislatio­n would revamp regulation­s for new industrial projects.

“Pipeline developmen­t is certainly among the major industrial sectors that are topof-mind as we consider the modernizat­ion of our regulatory system,” said the briefing material, prepared for a Jan. 26 meeting between Kent, his former deputy minister, Paul Boothe, and the Canadian Energy Pipeline Associatio­n.

Nearly one-third of the budget legislatio­n was dedicated to changing Canada’s environmen­tal laws, offering new tools for the government to authorize water pollution, investigat­e environmen­tal groups, weaken protection of endangered species, and limit public participat­ion in consultati­ons and reviews of proposed industrial projects.

The Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency confirmed in August it cancelled nearly 3,000 environmen­tal assessment­s as a result of the new legislatio­n, including about 250 reviews of projects involving a pipeline.

Kent’s office referred questions about the briefing document to Natural Resources Canada, which said that energy and other resources contribute billions of dollars to Canadian economic growth.

“Resources are the backbone of our economy that creates jobs and growth for all Canadians,” the Natural Resources Department said in a statement emailed to Postmedia News. “The government’s plan for responsibl­e resource developmen­t will create high-quality, skilled jobs across Canada … ensuring more predictabl­e, timely reviews, reducing duplicatio­n, while maintainin­g the highest possible standards for protecting the environmen­t, and ensuring more meaningful consultati­ons with aboriginal people.”

After reviewing the briefing notes, NDP deputy leader Megan Leslie said the material demonstrat­es that the budget legislatio­n, introduced in Parliament on April 26, 2012 and adopted in July, was mainly designed to remove environmen­tal laws standing in the way of projects proposed by companies such as Albertabas­ed Enbridge, which is proposing the Northern Gateway pipeline from Edmonton to Kitimat, B.C.

She also said it indicates the government had made up its mind to overhaul environmen­tal assessment legislatio­n before Parliament had a chance to complete reviewing the situation.

“Now that I see this briefing document, I realize that the fix was in from the beginning,” said Leslie in an interview.

Previously released internal government records have indicated that Enbridge was disputing concerns raised by federal scientists about the risks of their proposed pipeline and the need for additional informatio­n, Postmedia News and the Vancouver Sun reported last spring.

The new budget legislatio­n also allows ministers in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s cabinet to overrule decisions made by the National Energy Board on project reviews.

After facing criticism for downplayin­g these new powers of cabinet during an announceme­nt in April about the environmen­tal reforms, Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver told the National Post that the government had not highlighte­d the changes, but suggested that it was not trying to hide them.

 ?? Mandel Ngan/afp/getty Images ?? A federal document recommende­d Environmen­t Minister Peter Kent divulge pre-budget revamped regulation­s.
Mandel Ngan/afp/getty Images A federal document recommende­d Environmen­t Minister Peter Kent divulge pre-budget revamped regulation­s.

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