Calgary Herald

NEB agrees to consider challenge over pipeline approval

- DAN HEALING AND DIRK MEISSNER

The National Energy Board says it will consider a jurisdicti­onal challenge of a pipeline approval that is a key component in a recently sanctioned $40-billion liquefied natural gas export facility in British Columbia.

The federal regulator says it will accept submission­s until next Monday from challenger Mike Sawyer, the provincial and federal government­s, and other parties on whether the 670-kilometre pipeline should be considered a federal project.

If it is, it will require National Energy Board approval to proceed, making approval of the Coastal GasLink Pipeline Ltd. project from the British Columbia Oil and Gas Commission insufficie­nt.

LNG Canada announced earlier this month that it was going ahead with a plant in Kitimat on B.C.’s coast, with the pipeline delivering natural gas from the northeast corner of the province.

The energy board says Sawyer’s jurisdicti­onal challenge was received in July. Comment was then provided by Coastal, which is a subsidiary of TransCanad­a Corp., and Sawyer was allowed to reply.

It says Sawyer argues that because TransCanad­a operates the pipeline and the connected Nova Gas Transmissi­on Ltd. system together, they are in fact a single federal undertakin­g.

In reply, according to the NEB, Coastal accuses Sawyer of pursuing a “vexatious” litigation designed to frustrate upstream natural gas developmen­t in B.C., further charging it’s not a coincidenc­e that his complaint was made as the project was finally proceeding, not years ago when it was approved.

LNG Canada’s five partners — Royal Dutch Shell, Mitsubishi Corp., Malaysian-owned Petronas, PetroChina Co. and Korean Gas Corp. — had delayed the final investment decision on the project in 2016, citing a drop in natural gas prices.

Sawyer could not be reached for comment, but his lawyer said the board’s decision is “a major step forward.”

“There’s a real kind of rule of law issue here as to whether a pipeline like this really is in federal jurisdicti­on under the Constituti­on versus whether it’s under provincial jurisdicti­on,” said Bill Andrews.

TransCanad­a said in a statement Monday that is was disappoint­ed with the NEB’s decision, but believes “the facts pertaining to this project will support a strong case of continued provincial regulation of the pipeline.”

“We understand this decision only represents the start of a review process to examine the issue of jurisdicti­on more closely, and not a final decision on the jurisdicti­on of the project,” the Calgary-based company said. “However, the Coastal GasLink project was subject to a robust two-year environmen­tal and technical review as part of the B.C. regulatory process, whereby it received all of its valid permits under the current provincial regulatory bodies.”

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