The Hamilton Spectator

Keystone decision hurts: Oliver

Critics say Harper government paying the price for poor relations

- MICHAEL TUTTON

HALIFAX The United States government’s decision to stall the Keystone XL pipeline project will harm American energy security and the economies of both the U.S. and Canada, says the federal finance minister.

Joe Oliver said Tuesday that the U.S. administra­tion’s indefinite delay of the project hurts employment on both sides of the border.

“I’m very disappoint­ed by the American decision to delay yet again this project, which is perhaps the most studied natural resources project in the history of the world,” he said after giving a speech to the Halifax Chamber of Commerce.

The U.S. State Department announced Friday that it wants to give federal agencies more time to review the $5.4-billion pipeline proposal by Calgary-based TransCanad­a.

Washington also says it won’t issue a permit for the pipeline to cross the border for now while the proposed route is being disputed in the Nebraska court system.

Oliver said the energy security of the U.S. depends on having multiple sources of oil.

“There’s a national security issue here because Canadian crude oil will be supplantin­g Venezuelan crude oil. Let’s not forget that Venezuela threatened to cut off the United States five times in the previous five years,” he said.

“We see the vulnerabil­ity countries have when they rely on nonreliabl­e sources of energy.”

Oliver said delaying the project also delays the creation of thousands of jobs.

But critics with the opposition say the Canadian government has lost influence with the U.S. and the Keystone decision shouldn’t come as a surprise to Oliver.

Nathan Cullen, the Opposition NDP’s finance critic, said the Conservati­ve government hasn’t been diplomatic enough.

“The insult and the incredible lack of diplomacy from Mr. Harper going after Mr. Obama has backfired,” he said.

Liberal finance critic Scott Brison said the Keystone deal would have been completed under previous Conservati­ve or Liberal government­s because there were better relationsh­ips between Ottawa and Washington then.

“Harper doesn’t play well with others,” he said. Prior to speaking to reporters about Keystone, Oliver gave a speech to a business audience that emphasized his government’s efforts to control spending and balance the budget.

“Our government will not engage in reckless new spending schemes that would lead to increased taxes or higher debt or both,” Oliver said.

“We worked too hard to return to a balanced budget to throw it all away. We will not go down that well-trod path to economic decline.”

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund dropped Canada down in its growth forecasts earlier this year, predicting the U.S. will experience the strongest economic growth among the G7 countries this year.

Oliver said he’s not concerned about Canada lagging being U.S. economic growth, as the American economy has had further to recover from a global economic downturn that spread around the world five years ago.

He took over the finance portfolio after Jim Flaherty’s resignatio­n last month.

 ?? HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? The U.S. announced Friday it wants more time for review of the $5.4-billion pipeline.
HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO The U.S. announced Friday it wants more time for review of the $5.4-billion pipeline.

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