Edmonton Journal

Move planned oil terminal, Quebec premier says

TransCanad­a site near belugas a tough sell, Couillard warns

- MARTIN OUELLET The Canadian Press

QUEBEC — TransCanad­a Corp. should abandon its plan to build an oil terminal in an area in eastern Quebec where belugas have been listed as an endangered species, Premier Philippe Couillard said Tuesday.

A federal government wildlife committee recently concluded their numbers near Cacouna have dwindled to 1,000 from a high of 10,000.

That informatio­n will make it harder for TransCanad­a to sell the Energy East project at environmen­tal hearings in Quebec and with the National Energy Board, Couillard told a joint news conference with his Alberta counterpar­t, Jim Prentice.

“It’s not my role to speak for the promoter or to answer for them but it strikes me it would be difficult to continue to see a port terminal at that site with that informatio­n,” he said. “Whether they want to choose an alternativ­e site for the port is for them to decide but it certainly adds to the level of difficulty in view of the process that is going to start soon.”

The Calgary-based company wants the terminal in Cacouna as part of its 4,600-kilometre pipeline, which would carry 1.1 million barrels per day of oilsands crude from Alberta to refineries in Quebec and New Brunswick.

On Monday, it announced it would halt all work on the terminal in response to concerns the project could hurt the beluga habitat.

TransCanad­a spokesman Tim Duboyce said the company will “review all viable options” after it analyzes the environmen­tal report from the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada.

Prentice, who is on a crosscount­ry tour and will meet Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne on Wednesday, said his preferred option is for a terminal on the St. Lawrence.

“Clearly it’s very difficult if the belugas, as an endangered species, are dependent on the Cacouna site,” he told the news conference alongside Couillard.

“I hope there will be discussion­s between the proponents and Premier Couillard about other alternativ­e locations. It would seem to me that the project will be stronger as a piece of nation-building infrastruc­ture if there is a port facility in the province of Quebec.”

Prentice reiterated the financial benefits he believes Energy East would bring. “It’s a very important project for the future of the country,” he said. “It’s important for economic growth in Alberta and for the entire country.”

Late last month, Couillard and Wynne released a list of conditions for the pipeline to get the green light. They include emergency response measures, First Nation consultati­ons and considerat­ion of the impact on greenhouse gas emissions.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Premier Jim Prentice, left, joins Quebec’s Philippe Couillard at a news conference Tuesday.
JACQUES BOISSINOT/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Premier Jim Prentice, left, joins Quebec’s Philippe Couillard at a news conference Tuesday.

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