National Post

Enbridge distances itself from EPA condo conflict

ENERGY

- Jesse Snyder jsnyder@ nationalpo­st. com

OTTAWA• En bridge Inc. denied conflict of interest claims on Tuesday after a report found that the head of the U. S.’s energy regulator had been paying US$50 a day for a property near Capitol Hill linked to the chairman of a key Washington lobby firm that represents the Calgary- based pipeline company.

The rebuttal came after The New York Times reported that Scott Pruitt, the head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency ( EPA), had been renting a condominiu­m from the wife of Steven Hart, the chairman of Williams and Jensen, around the time the EPA approved Enbridge’s controvers­ial Line 67 replacemen­t project.

Liz Bowman, a spokeswoma­n for Pruitt, told the Times in a written statement that “any attempt to draw that link is patently false.”

Enbridge said in a written statement Tuesday that the lobbying group’s recent activity didn’t involve regulatory dealings tied to the pipeline project, and instead focused on broader policy issues.

“The facts do not support the reporter’s insinuatio­n,” the company said. “Williams and Jensen has not worked on any regulatory matters before the current administra­tion on behalf of Enbridge. This includes matters before the EPA related to the Line 67 permit mentioned in the NYT story.”

The company went on to say that Hart “has never been registered to lobby on behalf of Enbridge.”

The lobbyist registry for the U. S. House of Representa­tives shows one Williams and Jensen lobbyist registered to represent Enbridge as recently as the fourth quarter of 2017. The lobby group did not provide more details around the nature of those lobbying efforts, but filings on the U. S. lobbying disclosure website state the discussion­s focused on “issues related to Canadian oil sands” and issues “affecting pipelines and constructi­on of new pipelines.” Other discussion­s included “tax reform” and “pipeline safety issues and U. S. source re- quirements on pipe,” according to filings.

Enbridge, for i ts part, said in a written response that “Williams and Jensen participat­ed in advocacy on broader public policy issues, but not before the EPA and not regarding the Line 67 presidenti­al permit.”

In a search on the disclosure website, Enbridge’s name turned up 137 times as a client for lobbyists to the U. S. House of Representa­tives, with Williams and Jensen representi­ng the company 47 times since 2006, including four times last year alone.

Pruitt was renting a condominiu­m near Capitol Hill for $ 50 per night that was partly owned by Hart’s wife, according to the New York Times story, which claimed the transactio­n presents a potential conflict of interest. The story said the rental rate was well below other similar rental options in the region.

The EPA signed off on Line 67, also known as the Alberta Clipper line, in 2017. The expansion project that runs from Hardisty in Alberta to Superior, Wisconsin will allow the company to boost capacity to around 890,000 barrels per day, up from around 450,000 bpd today.

Enbridge said that the entire regulatory process for the Line 67 expansion, also known as the Alberta Clipper, took more than four years and was “exceptiona­lly thorough.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK, FILE ?? U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt is under recent fire for a reported conflict of interest.
AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK, FILE U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt is under recent fire for a reported conflict of interest.

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