Edmonton Journal

Many questions unanswered at pipeline hearing

B.C. dissatisfi­ed with Northern Gateway response on spill plans

- DENE MOORE

VANCOUVER — Lawyers for British Columbia’s provincial government wrapped up their cross-examinatio­n of company experts at the Northern Gateway review hearings on Friday with many questions left unanswered.

Environmen­t Minister Terry Lake said the province was looking for more informatio­n on the oil spill prevention and response plans promised as part of the $6-billion project.

“Through our cross-examinatio­n, we didn’t get as much informatio­n as we hoped to from (Northern Gateway Pipelines) on how they intend to deliver the world-leading spill prevention, response and remediatio­n that we require,” Lake said Friday. “That is something we feel the panel will give due considerat­ion.”

The province also expressed concern about the testimony given under oath about the company’s oil-spill plans.

“During cross-examinatio­n in Prince George on landbased spill preparedne­ss and response, (Northern Gateway) did not demonstrat­e how they would be able to access or respond to spills in remote areas or how they would locate and recover sunken oil,” said the statement from the provincial Environmen­t Ministry.

“The province’s cross-examinatio­n also revealed that (the company) will not have a spill response plan finalized until six months before pipeline operations begin.”

It pointed out that the company will not have a marine emergency response plan until after the project has been approved either, and testimony this week confirmed those plans won’t include a dedicated rescue tug or specific tanker routes.

British Columbia has set out five conditions for its approval of the project, including a “world-leading” oil spill prevention and response plan and a “fair share” of the economic benefits.

“We have made it clear that B.C. will only support the Northern Gateway pipeline if it satisfies our five conditions,” Lake said, adding that the next step is to assess whether that is the case. B.C. has commission­ed an independen­t report on oil-spill regulation­s and has a symposium scheduled next week in Vancouver.

The possibilit­y of an oil spill on land or at sea is a major hurdle for the multibilli­on-dollar project.

Last week, the federal government announced additional tanker safety measures to try to address concerns in B.C. about this and several other pipeline proposals.

Ivan Giesbrecht, spokesman for Northern Gateway Pipelines, said the emergency response plans to date will be refined and tested before operations start.

The company wants to work with the province, he said.

The panel has yet to hear intervener­s and federal government officials questioned under oath, before final arguments begin in May. The panel report is due by the end of the year.

 ??  ?? Terry Lake
Terry Lake

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