Montreal Gazette

Burnaby lawyers, Kinder Morgan spar during NEB hearing on pipeline project

- DOUGLAS QUAN

BURNABY, B.C. It didn’t take long Tuesday for a City of Burnaby lawyer to lay into Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd.’s vice-president of operations, repeatedly grilling him at a National Energy Board hearing over whether he knew that a section of the proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion went through a designated conservati­on area.

“I think we’ll get a lot quicker to where we want to go if you answer the questions I ask,” Gregory McDade said pointedly to Kinder Morgan’s Michael Davies. “Did Trans Mountain know this land was intended for the conservati­on area or not?”

Burnaby’s intent was not clear, Davies replied, saying that maps the company obtained from the city showed that their proposed route did not go through the conservati­on area.

Did you ever ask Burnaby “flat out, is this or is this not part of your conservati­on area?” McDade pressed on, demanding a yes or no answer.

A company lawyer cut in, suggesting to the three-member panel that not every question can be answered with a simple yes or no.

“This isn’t an episode of Columbo,” he said.

The sparring came on the second day of hearings aimed at determinin­g the exact configurat­ion of the $7.4-billion expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline meant to deliver Alberta crude oil to the B.C. coast and then on to Asian markets.

The federal government gave its conditiona­l approval to the project in fall 2016, approving a 150-metre wide corridor within which the pipeline could be built. The current hearings are focused on a 35-kilometre stretch of the proposed pipeline that would go through parts of Burnaby, Coquitlam and Surrey.

At times taking on the tone of a feisty courtroom drama, other times lumbering along like a zoning bylaw meeting, the hearings — held under heavy security in a Burnaby hotel conference room — allow private landowners and municipal officials to air their grievances and question Kinder Morgan officials.

According to written submission­s by the City of Burnaby, the proposed route — an expansion of an existing pipeline built in 1953 — would cut through public use green space and trails, and impact sensitive ecosystems.

Throughout Tuesday’s hearing, Davies told the panel the company chose the “best possible route” for the project and adhered to “standard” routing principles.

Given that the existing pipeline is now surrounded by heavy growth, it was not practical, he said, for the company to build along the existing route. So instead it tried to align the route with other existing infrastruc­ture, such as roads, railways and utility lines and do so with minimal impact on landowners, he said.

The company also carefully considered impacts on environmen­tal spaces, Davies said, insisting that the city maps the company relied upon showed their route does not intersect the Brunette River Conservati­on Area but runs adjacent to it.

“What if your map is wrong?” McDade shot back, pulling out other maps, including one from the city’s official community plan from 1998, showing different boundaries.

Earlier, McDade questioned whether the routing principles used by the company were standard for the industry.

“They’re standard for the project,” Davies replied.

“Let me be more direct,” McDade said. “It’s not usual to take a pipeline through the heart of major municipali­ty, is it?”

“It’s not something that happens frequently,” Davies acknowledg­ed.

McDade suggested the company “did not follow any objective process” and “targeted city lands that were open … for the taking,” an assertion Davies denied.

It’s not usual to take a pipeline through the heart of major municipali­ty, is it?

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain project’s oil storage tank farm in Burnaby, B.C. The City of Burnaby says that the proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion would cut through a designated conservati­on site.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS The Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain project’s oil storage tank farm in Burnaby, B.C. The City of Burnaby says that the proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion would cut through a designated conservati­on site.

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