Calgary Herald

Stop oilsands growth, groups urge premiers

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A dozen environmen­tal groups across Canada say there should be no role for oilsands growth in a Canadian energy strategy.

Canada’s premiers are meeting St. John’s, N. L., and an energy agreement is high on the agenda.

The groups want a strategy that would halt oilsands developmen­t and the infrastruc­ture that would support it, such as pipelines, oil train facilities and tankers.

They also want the provinces to make clean energy infrastruc­ture a higher priority than new oil and gas proposals.

The notion of a Canadian energy strategy came about in 2012 under then- Alberta premier Alison Redford.

A big component of that vision was improving market access for Alberta crude by building support for new pipeline infrastruc­ture.

“Approving tarsands pipelines like Energy East and Kinder Morgan, which is what this strategy appears to do, would lock in high carbon emissions and make it practicall­y impossible for Canada to reach its climate reduction targets,” said Dale Marshall, national program manager with Environmen­tal Defence.

Alberta NDP Premier Rachel Notley has taken a different approach to pipelines than her Progressiv­e Conservati­ve predecesso­rs.

She has said she won’t advocate for TransCanad­a’s long- delayed Keystone XL pipeline in the United States or Enbridge’s contentiou­s Northern Gateway proposal across British Columbia.

But Notley has given qualified support to Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain expansion to the Vancouver area and TransCanad­a’s Energy East Pipeline to New Brunswick.

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