Toronto Star

Union leaders ‘not happy’ with Singh

- NDP leader pulled support for natural gas projects in B.C.

ALEX BALLINGALL

OTTAWA— Union leaders in British Columbia say they are bewildered and disappoint­ed that federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh dialed back his support for natural gas projects that are expected to create thousands of jobs in the province.

Earlier this week, Singh said liquified natural gas (LNG) projects in northern B.C. no longer “satisfy” his criteria for major resource projects he can support. A party spokespers­on confirmed to the Star that Singh was referring to LNG Canada’s planned export facility in Kitimat — a $40-billion project the Liberal government boasts as “the largest private sector investment” in Canadian history — and the Coastal GasLink pipeline project that is opposed by hereditary chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en nation.

The NDP leader believes more consultati­ons are needed on the projects. He also wants Canada to stop using fossil fuels and “fracking,” a controvers­ial method of extracting natural gas that is often condemned by environmen­talists — and the method used in the region that will supply the gas for the pipeline and export facility.

Leaders of unions with thousands of jobs at stake in the projects — which have already been approved by government­s and regulators — said Wednesday that they feel let down that Singh is backing away from his previous support.

“It hurts. There’s really no other way to explain it,” said Mark Olsen, president of the Local 1611 chapter of the Laborers’ Internatio­nal Union of North America, which expects 1,500 jobs for its members.

“We have the provincial NDP in B.C. supportive, and all of a sudden it appears we don’t have the federal NDP supportive,” Olsen told the Star by phone Wednesday.

“We’re not happy about it at all.”

Patrick Campbell, director of pipeline constructi­on in Canada for the Internatio­nal Union of Operating Engineers, said he is confused and disappoint­ed that Singh would withdraw his support for the 670-kilometre Coastal GasLink pipeline, which is expected to create 2,000 to 2,500 jobs for members of his union and millions of dollars in economic activity in northern B.C.

“This is not only a province-building project, it’s what we would consider a nation-building project,” Campbell said.

Singh indicated he supported both projects earlier this year. He told CTV in January that he supported the Coastal GasLink pipeline because consultati­ons with Indigenous peoples “were done in a very meaningful way.” In February, he told The Canadian Press that the pipeline and export facility “demonstrat­ed some clear, positive steps around consultati­on.”

During the recent byelection in the Vancouver Island riding island of Nanaimo-Ladysmith, the victorious Green Party argued Singh’s support for the LNG projects showed he approved of “fracking.” Green Leader Elizabeth May said her party is the only one that will oppose the practice in Canada.

Veteran New Democrat Svend Robinson called the Green win in the riding — held until January by the NDP — a “wake-up call” that shows the party needs to take a stronger and clearer stand on the environmen­t and climate change.

Days later, Singh said on Parliament Hill that his party does not support “fracking” and that the NDP wants Canada to transition away from fossil fuels and invest heavily in renewable energy.

He also emphasized his enduring opposition to the government-owned Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, which would carry three times as much oilsands bitumen from Alberta to B.C.’s Lower Mainland, and increase oil tanker traffic off the west coast.

“If it spills it will devastate the entire coastline, threatenin­g jobs, marine diversity ... This is terrible,” Singh said as he presented the NDP’s motion to call for a “climate emergency” in the House of Commons.

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