The Standard (St. Catharines)

Keystone XL permit for river crossings blocked

U.S. judge rules Army Corps of Engineers improperly approved streamline­d permit process

- TOM KOROSEC AND KEVIN ORLAND

TC Energy Corp.’s Keystone XL oilsands pipeline was a dealt a setback with a judge’s ruling that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers improperly approved a streamline­d permit process without fully evaluating the impact on endangered species.

In a legal challenge brought by environmen­tal groups, a federal judge in Montana on Wednesday ordered the agency to conduct further review and barred it from authorizin­g dredging in waterways covered by the permit.

“We have received the judge’s ruling and continue to review it,” Calgary-based TC Energy said in a statement. “We remain committed to building this important energy infrastruc­ture project.”

The stakes in the legal challenges to Keystone XL rose higher than ever last month, when Canada’s oil-rich province of Alberta announced $5.3 billion (U.S.) in aid to help finance the conduit’s constructi­on and TC Energy formally committed to building the line. Already, the project was seen as a key lifeline for Alberta’s oilsands producers, which have suffered from a lack of pipeline capacity that has weighed on local crude prices and restrained their ability to boost output.

Even short delays to Keystone XL’s constructi­on could set the project back by a full year because pipeline work is highly seasonal, requiring unfrozen ground and other conditions. Legal delays last year caused TC Energy to miss the 2019 constructi­on window, pushing the already-delayed project back even further.

TC Energy chief executive officer Russ Girling said during a presentati­on last week that constructi­on may progress more slowly because physical distancing measures in response to the coronaviru­s.

The Sierra Club and other groups that sued the U.S. Army Corps in July said in a statement that the ruling invalidate­s a nationwide permit used to fast-track Keystone XL as well as other pipeline and utility projects. They said it could block Keystone’s constructi­on through hundreds of water crossings along its route.

Sonya Savage, Alberta’s energy minister, said the ruling was narrow and only directs the Army Corps to conduct additional review on two river crossings.

“Keystone XL is critical for the future of Alberta, Canada and the U.S.,” Savage said in a tweet. “We remain committed to this extremely important project.”

The Army Corps didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

TC Energy shares were down about 1.8 per cent at 2:10 p.m. in Toronto trading on Thursday.

The order by U.S. District Judge Brian Morris came a day before the judge is scheduled to hold a hearing on challenges to U.S. President Donald Trump’s issuance last year of a permit allowing the pipeline to cross the U.S.-Canada border. That permit was intended to replace one that Morris had blocked in 2018, saying the U.S. State Department needed to do further environmen­tal reviews.

Environmen­tal and Indigenous groups contend Trump exceeded his authority, saying it would disturb water supplies and tribal cultural sites.

 ?? AL NASH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Keystone XL project is seen as a key lifeline for Alberta’s oilsands producers. This photo shows where the pipeline crosses into the U.S. from Canada in Phillips County, Mont.
AL NASH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The Keystone XL project is seen as a key lifeline for Alberta’s oilsands producers. This photo shows where the pipeline crosses into the U.S. from Canada in Phillips County, Mont.

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