The Prince George Citizen

Pipeline battle heating up

T

- LES LEYNE

wo moves within a day signal the new course the NDP

government will be taking on matters related to the B.C. coast. Environmen­t Minister George Heyman declared plans for what amounts to a blockade against any increase in the current volume of heavy oil moved through B.C. Later, four cabinet ministers issued a statement that suggests the days of open-net salmon farming in at least one coastal region are numbered.

Apart from being coastal issues, the moves have another thing in common: They both amount to rule changes imposed on previously approved projects.

Environmen­tal groups are happy. Business interests are worried about the message sent to investors. And our neighbours are furious.

The new restrictio­ns on transport of diluted bitumen were softpedall­ed, and Heyman couldn’t bring himself to say they are aimed squarely at the Kinder Mor- gan pipeline-expansion project. But Alberta Premier Rachel Notley came out raging.

Notley, who also heads an NDP government, called the rules a direct attack on her province’s economy, said they are well outside provincial authority and promised to file suit. Her cabinet had an emergency meeting Wednesday, and retaliatio­n of some sort was high on the agenda.

“There need to be consequenc­es,” she warned. She said her cabinet is discussing options, including in the area of interprovi­ncial trade in electricit­y.

Referring to the B.C. NDP’s promise to use every tool in the toolbox to fight the pipeline, Notley said Alberta has been “polishing the tools in our toolbox.”

Her government has been brac- ing for the moment when the B.C.Alberta pipeline argument turns into open war, and it looks as if the time is at hand. She said: “We cannot let this unconstitu­tional attack on jobs and working people stand.”

She appealed to Ottawa for help and she’s likely to get it, as the federal government supports and has approved the pipeline.

So retaliatio­n is coming and it could be dramatic.

B.C. is proposing a set of regulation­s to set higher standards for spill response and restrict any increase in diluted-bitumen transport until the behaviour of dilbit is better understood, which would take years. An independen­t scientific advisory panel will study the issue.

About 20 million barrels a year move through B.C. currently, most by pipeline and some by rail. But the line is at full capacity and Alberta – and Canada – is losing billions by not moving more volume to offshore markets. The pipeline expansion is designed to address that.

But the B.C. government says the safety of the coast comes first.

“In order to protect B.C.’s environmen­tal and economic interests while the advisory panel is proceeding, the province is proposing regulatory restrictio­ns to be placed on the increase of dilbit transporta­tion.”

The study, the inevitable legal challenges and the political furor would add further delays to a $7.4-billion pipeline that is already well behind schedule, despite having all the required approvals. Which is probably the point of the whole exercise.

Later in the day, another coastal move was made.

Four cabinet ministers and four First Nations released a “statement on work in the Broughton Archipelag­o.” It came after a daylong meeting in Vancouver to discuss the issue of fish farms in the nations’ traditiona­l territorie­s.

The statement said: “The basis for this meeting was to jointly honour the implementa­tion of the UN Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and to confirm a commitment to a consent-based government-to-government pro- cess focused on the current fishfarm operations in the Broughton area, and the protection of wild salmon.

“We are prepared to do the necessary hard work to find a path forward together” by way of UNDRIP. The NDP government has committed to observe that declaratio­n’s requiremen­t for informed consent from First Nations on most developmen­t issues affecting their territorie­s.

No industry representa­tives were invited.

The statement essentiall­y confirms the threat Agricultur­e Minister Lana Popham issued to salmon farmers in October.

Popham was an ardent critic in Opposition and soon after she became a cabinet minister, she wrote to one firm warning that its routine restocking plan for one Broughton location could be problemati­c to its tenure, which could not be guaranteed.

The days of open-net pens on the coast appear limited. And the all-out war over control and access to the coast is about to begin.

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