The Daily Courier

Much more pipeline drama to come

- By MONIQUE KEIRAN Monique Keiran writes for the Victoria Times Colonist

Pipeline projects in North America seem to come with built-in drama in the 21st century. We’ve just seen the latest installmen­t in the Keystone XL saga.

U.S. President Joe Biden cancelled a key presidenti­al permit for the pipeline border crossing on Jan. 20, his first day in office. It was one of his election promises, and his team warned leading up his inaugurati­on that it would happen quickly.

The decision overturns former president Donald Trump’s 2017 approval of the $8-billion US cross-border pipeline expansion.

Trump’s approval, in turn, overturned the Obama administra­tion’s 2015 rejection of the project.

When TransCanad­a (now TC Energy) proposed the project in 2005, Keystone XL wasn’t seen as a big deal. It was just one among thousands of pipelines across North America. The 1,947-kilometre pipeline was designed to carry 830,000 barrels a day of crude oil from Alberta’s oilsands to Nebraska, where another existing pipeline would take the oil to refineries on the Texas Gulf coast.

Then the project became a symbol in the fight against climate change. Grassroots organizati­ons started campaignin­g against it. Supporters also rallied, determined, even after Obama had rejected it, to keep fighting for the project and the jobs it would create.

And thus a pipeline project served up high drama and high stakes.

Since the 2017 approval, some 200 kilometres of pipe have been installed, including across the border. Constructi­on also started on pump stations in Alberta and some U.S. states.

With approval pulled, TC Energy Corp. has suspended work on the project and plans to eliminate more than 1,000 constructi­on jobs.

Without Keystone, B.C. is now the primary route for Alberta oil to access lucrative offshore markets, particular­ly Asia. The plan to twin the existing Trans Mountain line will triple its capacity to bring oil to an expanded terminal in Burnaby.

Trans Mountain has its own on-again, offagain, dramatic saga, as we know. Court challenges kept the project’s fate uncertain for years. When Texas-based Kinder Morgan pulled out in 2018 because of political and environmen­tal opposition to the project, the Trudeau government purchased the pipeline. Then it fought off more legal and political challenges, including those from B.C.’s NDP government.

Last July, the Supreme Court of Canada dismissed an applicatio­n for leave to appeal from a group of B.C. First Nations who sought to challenge the federal cabinet’s second approval of the project.

High-profile protests along the pipeline’s Lower Mainland route slowed work, too, as have pandemic-related restrictio­ns.

The federal government says it bought the line because the expansion is essential to Canada’s economy. The purchase — at $4.5 billion — also short-circuited legal action by Kinder Morgan that may have been even costlier.

Under internatio­nal trade agreements, such as NAFTA and World Trade Organizati­on treaties, companies can sue for losses caused by government­s’ policies and actions. Since 1994, Canada has been sued at least 39 times by foreign companies claiming Canadian policies have violated their rights under NAFTA.

Canada has lost or settled eight cases and paid more than $215 million in compensati­on.

In 2016, in response to Obama’s rejection of the Keystone project, TC Energy launched legal action against the U.S., seeking US$15 billion in damages. It withdrew the claim after Trump was elected. Now that Biden has ended the project, the company may well undertake a similar trade appeal.

It may not win — the U.S. has not yet lost a single case or paid out a single dollar in compensati­on.

As for Alberta oil producers who’d looked forward to shipping crude via an expanded Keystone, six years of low oil prices and declining interest by investors have lowered their production expectatio­ns.

They also have alternativ­es — the replacemen­t of an Enbridge-owned EdmontonWi­sconsin pipeline, and the Trans Mountain expansion to the coast here, which will carry the bulk of Alberta’s crude to offshore markets.

But B.C. has more pipeline drama in the wings. Trans Mountain hasn’t yet been completed, and there’s the Coastal GasLink pipeline being built to carry natural gas from the Dawson Creek area to Kitimat to keep an eye on. We’re likely to hear more about both.

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MIAMI — Two men and a woman had lost track of days as they survived on a diet of coconuts, conchs and rats for more than a month after they were cast away on a deserted island between Florida and Cuba.

U.S. Coast Guard officials said the trio from Cuba told them their boat had capsized in rough waters and they were able to swim to Anguilla Cay, where they spent 33 days before they were spotted and rescued.

The uninhabite­d island of rocky ground and palm trees and shrubs is part of an atoll of the Bahamas that is much closer to Cuba and monitored by the U.S. Coast Guard for strandings of refugees trying to reach U.S. soil.

Lt. Riley Beecher, a Coast Guard pilot, said that while on a routine mission they saw on Monday what looked like flags waving in the usually brown and light green topography.

“I thought ‘let’s take a closer look.’ I had never seen anything on that island.” Lt. Beecher said. “Then I saw two people were franticall­y waving their hands trying to get us to come down.”

The Coast Guard initially dropped some water and a radio to be able to communicat­e. Later on Monday, another crew flew back to bring more supplies. One of the pilots who flew on the second trip, Lt. Justin Dougherty, said the woman was low on blood sugar and was given packets to get her levels back to normal.

“They definitely seemed very relieved,” he said after they had been discovered and offered supplies. “They had lost track of exactly what day it was.”

Dougherty said the stranded travellers said the coconuts kept them hydrated and they also ate the meat of conchs and rats. It could have been worse had they not found palm trees or had it been hotter.

“I was amazed that they could go for that long and sound as coherent,” Dougherty said. “Hydration was the most important aspect.”

They were rescued on Tuesday morning and taken to the Lower Keys Medical Center with no serious injuries.

The U.S. Border Patrol took custody of the three Cubans from the Key West hospital and they were taken to a facility in Pompano Beach, the Coast Guard said. Immigratio­n officials did not immediatel­y say whether they would be deported.

It was not clear whether this group was attempting to come to the U.S. or just lost at sea, as U.S. Coast Guard officials said they were focused on just rescuing them. A larger group of Cubans was stranded for 10 days in a beach of Cay Sal Bank, not far from Anguilla Cay, last October.

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