The Telegram (St. John's)

Enbridge proposes Northern Gateway changes

Alberta launches pipeline review

- BY LAUREN KRUGEL With files from Keven Drews in Vancouver and Bob Weber in Edmonton

Ecern — oil tankers.

“These tankers are still going to be going through the fourth most dangerous body of water in the world, and they still have the potential to wipe out everything on the coast of British Columbia with absolutely no benefits going to anybody in B.C.,” Art Sterritt said.

Holder indicated Enbridge’s plans for the marine terminal and tankers will remain unchanged.

“We have already raised the bar, I would say, in that our standards for the terminal site and the safety of the tankers off the West Coast of British Columbia far exceeds any standards in Canada and actually exceeds any standards within the world,” she said.

In Calgary, meanwhile, Alberta Energy Minister Ken Hughes announced the province would tap an independen­t third party to work with the Energy Resources Conservati­on Board in reviewing pipeline nbridge Inc. is proposing to spend up to $500 million to change the design of its Northern Gateway pipeline in a bid to address safety concerns of aboriginal groups and others.

The project, which had a $5.5-billion pricetag before Friday’s announceme­nt, has been the focus of intense debate among local communitie­s, environmen­tal groups and politician­s.

Enbridge made its announceme­nt on the same day the Alberta government — a staunch supporter of Northern Gateway — announced an independen­t pipeline safety review following three leaks in the province this year.

Critics of Northern Gateway, a paired system of pipelines between the oilsands in northern Alberta and a terminal near Kitimat, B.C., have said they’re worried about the potential environmen­tal risks it poses within the B.C. Interior and in coastal waters.

The Calgary-based company said Friday it had listened to the feedback from public hearings and was prepared to address concerns with a combinatio­n of improved technology and monitoring.

“We had already planned to build a state-of-the-art project using the most advanced technology, safety measures and procedures in the industry,” said Janet Holder, executive vice-president for western access.

“These initiative­s announced today make what we believe is a very safe project even safer.”

Among other things, Enbridge says its new design would increase the thickness of pipe walls at river crossings.

Enbridge says it would also increase the number of inspection­s it does by at least 50 per cent and staff pumping stations in remote locations around the clock.

“And after years of consultati­on with stakeholde­rs and after personally attending many of the regulatory hearings for Northern Gateway, it has become clear to me that we have to do everything we can to ensure confidence in the project,” Holder told reporters on a conference call.

The executive director of B.C. Coastal First Nations, a group that represents aboriginal­s on the province’s central and northern coasts, said the announceme­nt does nothing to alleviate its major con- integrity, the safety of pipe that crosses waterways and response to spills.

“The scrutiny is at a level we have never seen before. I welcome that scrutiny and I believe our pipeline companies do so as well,” Hughes told a news conference.

There have been three pipeline leaks in Alberta this year, including the leak of up to 475,000 litres of oil into the Red Deer River, a major drinking water source in central Alberta.

The company that owns that pipeline, Plains Midstream Canada, was responsibl­e for a bigger spill in Northern Alberta more than a year ago.

Greenpeace released the pictures Friday of a pond adjacent to the Rainbow pipeline leak that was detected April 29, 2011 and spilled 4.5 million litres of oil onto the landscape.

The photos, which Greenpeace says were taken last week, appear to show large globs of oil fouling vegetation and an oily sheen on the water. Deer and wolf tracks were spotted around the bank of the fouled pond.

Samples of oil and water said to be from the site smelled sharply of oil and burned rubber. Greenpeace has yet to test the samples to determine what they contain.

Hughes held meetings with three industry groups — the Canadian Energy Pipeline Associatio­n, the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers and the Small Explorers and Producers Associatio­n of Canada — before announcing the review.

Environmen­tal groups and others outside of industry did not take part.

“I specifical­ly wanted to meet with the regulator and with the industry — the people who are closest to the file who actually understand this in most intimate detail,” said Hughes.

The scope of the review has not yet been determined. Hughes said it will likely take months, not years, to complete.

Sierra Club Prairie Director Chelsea Flook said it’s good the Alberta government has acknowledg­ed the problem, even if it was under “tremendous” pressure.

“Unfortunat­ely it’s not yet a review that will provide answers that Albertan communitie­s can trust,” she said in a release.

“The ERCB is part of Alberta’s pipeline problem and should not be a partner leading the safety review process. Alberta’s communitie­s and environmen­t need answers from a completely independen­t review process.”

Brenda Kenny, head of the pipeline associatio­n, told reporters incidents such as the ones in Alberta raise important questions.

“And our job is to do two things — firstly, be safe every day and secondly, ensure the public is confident that we are among the best in the world,” she said.

“So this kind of review will bring that to light. I’m very proud of our members’ track record overall. I think when you look at the statistics you can see we are very safe but we are continuous­ly improving and anything we can learn from this is fantastic.”

David Pryce, vice-president of operations at the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, said the review will be important for those inside Alberta and outside.

“Our markets are offshore south of the border,” he said.

or

 ?? — Photo by The Canadian Press ?? Little Buffalo band member Melina Laboucan-Massimo recently scoops up what appears to oil from the pond shoreline near the site of a 4.5 million-litre Plains Midstream pipeline leak detected April 29, 2011.
— Photo by The Canadian Press Little Buffalo band member Melina Laboucan-Massimo recently scoops up what appears to oil from the pond shoreline near the site of a 4.5 million-litre Plains Midstream pipeline leak detected April 29, 2011.

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