Penticton Herald

Province suffers blow in battle to halt pipeline

Appeal Court ruling that B.C. can’t limit oil shipments a major win for Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project

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VANCOUVER — British Columbia lost the largest tool in its toolbox to halt the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion with a court decision Friday that concluded it can’t restrict oil shipments through its borders.

The unanimous ruling from the B.C. Court of Appeal represente­d a major win for the project, which the federal government and Alberta see as crucial to getting more oilsands crude to overseas markets.

B.C.’s minority NDP government, which took power on a promise to use every tool available to stop the expansion, swiftly announced plans to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.

“Our government said from the outset that we would stand up for British Columbia’s environmen­t, our economy and our coast,” said Attorney General David Eby. “Thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in economic activity would be put at risk by a diluted bitumen spill.”

The province filed a constituti­onal reference question to the Appeal Court that asked whether it had the authority to create a permitting regime for companies that wished to increase their flow of diluted bitumen.

A five-judge panel agreed that the amendments to B.C.’s Environmen­tal Management Act were not constituti­onal because they would interfere with the federal government’s exclusive jurisdicti­on over interprovi­ncial pipelines.

Justice Mary Newbury wrote on behalf of the panel that the overall aim of the proposed amendments was to place conditions on and, if necessary, prohibit the movement of heavy oil through a federal undertakin­g.

Newbury also wrote that the legislatio­n is not just a general environmen­tal law, but is targeted at one substance in one interprovi­ncial pipeline: the Trans Mountain expansion project.

“Immediatel­y upon coming into force, it would prohibit the operation of the expanded Trans Mountain pipeline in the province until such time as a provincial­ly appointed official decided otherwise,” she said.

“This alone threatens to usurp the role of the (National Energy Board), which has made many rulings and imposed many conditions to be complied with by Trans Mountain for the protection of the environmen­t.”

The energy board is the body entrusted with regulating the flow of resources across Canada to export markets, Newbury wrote.

B.C. argued that the proposed amendments were meant to protect its environmen­t from a hazardous substance, while the federal government and Alberta said the goal was to block Trans Mountain.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said the decision is an occasion for “real hope” for hard-working people and the project will allow his province to realize a fair price for its resources and create new jobs.

“In light of the court’s decision, we hope that the B.C. government will respect the rule of law and end its campaign of obstructio­n,” he said.

Eby said his government originally asked Canada to join it in a reference case before the Supreme Court. The federal government

declined, so B.C. had to first file its case with the provincial Appeal Court, he said.

The Supreme Court of Canada automatica­lly hears provincial reference questions. Eby said the top court has overturned unanimous B.C. Appeal Court judgments in the past and the cost of pursuing the case was worth it.

“It is a fraction of a fraction of the cost of a diluted bitumen spill,” he said.

Saskatchew­an, Enbridge Inc. and the Canadian Associatio­n of Oil Producers argued in court against B.C.’s proposed permit regime, while some First Nations, cities and environmen­tal groups supported it.

The Haida and Heiltsuk Nations said the decision was a missed opportunit­y for reconcilia­tion because it failed to acknowledg­e their arguments about the role of Indigenous government­s in environmen­tal protection.

Heiltsuk Chief Coun. Marilyn Slett called the ruling “offensive and irresponsi­ble.”

“It is unacceptab­le that despite being granted interested party status, the court failed to even acknowledg­e ours or any other Indigenous government­s’ arguments in its decision. They invited us into the room, but they completely ignored us,” she said in a statement.

Lawyer Kegan Pepper-Smith represente­d Ecojustice in the case and said the decision leaves B.C., its communitie­s and environmen­t exposed to a potentiall­y disastrous spill.

There is still plenty the B.C. government could do to stop the Trans Mountain expansion, such as adding conditions to its provincial environmen­tal certificat­e, said Peter McCartney, a climate campaigner with the Wilderness Committee.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has purchased the Trans Mountain pipeline and expansion project for $4.5 billion. Constructi­on was paused last August after the Federal Court of Appeal overturned the federal permits.

 ?? Canadian Press file photo ?? A security guard stands nearby constructi­on workers at the Kinder Morgan Burnaby Terminal tank farm, the terminus point of the Trans Mountain pipeline, in Burnaby, B.C., on April 30.
Canadian Press file photo A security guard stands nearby constructi­on workers at the Kinder Morgan Burnaby Terminal tank farm, the terminus point of the Trans Mountain pipeline, in Burnaby, B.C., on April 30.

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