The Prince George Citizen

Ottawa won’t rush into Trans Mountain pipeline sale

- Bill GRAVELAND

CALGARY — Canada’s natural resources minister says the government is willing to consider bids from Indigenous groups for a stake in the Trans Mountain pipeline.

But Amarjeet Sohi also says Ottawa wouldn’t jump at the first offer on the table.

“We have seen from Indigenous communitie­s that they are interested in having an equity... in this project,” Sohi said Thursday at a business luncheon in Calgary.

“It is a very important conversati­on to have because Indigenous communitie­s should be benefiting from economic resource developmen­t. This will be an opportunit­y for us to work with them and explore that option.”

An Indigenous-led group called Project Reconcilia­tion has announced it could be ready as early as next week to make a $6.9-billion bid for majority ownership of the pipeline.

The group says almost 340 Indigenous communitie­s across British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchew­an could choose to share ownership in an expanded pipeline shipping crude oil from the Alberta oilsands to the west coast and from there to overseas markets.

Sohi said the government is a long way from beginning to look at serious offers for the pipeline. It plans to hold discussion­s in Vancouver, Victoria, Edmonton and Kamloops, B.C., later this month with Indigenous groups.

“We want to make sure there’s a capacity for all Indigenous communitie­s to engage on this,” Sohi said after the luncheon.

“This is a project that’s going to take a couple of years to complete and conversati­ons will continue to proceed.”

Sohi also said he expects there will be another court challenge of the government’s approval last month of Trans Mountain for a second time.

The proposal to twin an existing pipeline between Edmonton and Burnaby, B.C., was first approved by cabinet in 2016, but resistance to it by the British Columbia government, environmen­talists and some Indigenous groups grew.

The federal government purchased the existing line last year from Texas-based Kinder Morgan for $4.5 billion when the company threatened to walk away because of the uncertaint­y.

The Federal Court of Appeal rescinded the federal approval some months later. It said the impact on marine life needed to be considered and there had not been sufficient consultati­on with Indigenous people.

“We can demonstrat­e we have heard concerns from the Indigenous communitie­s and that we actually responded to the concerns of the communitie­s,” Sohi said Thursday.

“I’m very confident that the direction we followed from the Federal Court of Appeal and the way we have implemente­d that (puts us) in a very strong position.”

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