Toronto Star

Rail strike leaves Quebec facing propane shortage, premier says,

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

B1

A strike at Canadian National Railway Co. has left Quebec with fewer than five days before it runs out of propane, said Premier François Legault, who warned of an “emergency” that could wreak havoc at hospitals, nursing homes and farms. The shortage comes as pressure mounts on the one-day-old Trudeau cabinet to reconvene Parliament ahead of schedule and legislate the 3,200 striking workers back to work.

If the strike were to last until Dec. 5, when lawmakers resume work in Ottawa, it could crimp Canada’s economic output by as much as $3.1 billion, according to an analysis by the TorontoDom­inion Bank. That’s equivalent to a nearly one-quarter percentage point loss in the fourth quarter, Bloomberg reported.

Quebec has already started to ration propane, narrowing it to less than half the typical six million litres per day, Legault said. The province has about 12 million litres in reserve.

“We started to make choices,” Legault said Thursday. “That means we have enough for four days, four-and-a-half days.”

Priority has been given to health centres and retirement residences that rely on propane heating as well as farms, which use it to dry grain and heat barns and greenhouse­s.

“We could lose a lot of animals, a lot of food. We’re in an emergency,” Legault told reporters in Quebec City. “Honestly we can’t draw out this strike for a long time.”

The premier expressed hope for a settlement between CN Rail and the union, but called on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the opposition parties to pass back-to-work legislatio­n if necessary ahead of Parliament’s scheduled return.

Saskatchew­an Premier Scott Moe put forward an emergency motion in his provincial legislatur­e Thursday that called for “immediate action” to resolve the strike.

The NDP opposition blocked the motion.

“Each day that a work stoppage continues is a day of moving product to market that our agricultur­al producers, potash industry and energy sector cannot get back,” Moe said.

Alberta’s energy and agricultur­e ministers have demanded more specific steps to avert economic damage, asking Trudeau to recall Parliament and enact a back-to-work bill.

Canadian Propane Associatio­n CEO Nathalie St-Pierre says that six-hour truck lines for propane have already formed in Sarnia, Ont.

“It’s having a huge impact. We’re very concerned, because propane infrastruc­ture relies heavily on rail,” St-Pierre told The Canadian Press.

“There’s no pipeline that brings propane to Quebec.”

About 85 per cent of the province’s propane comes via rail, the bulk of it from Sarnia and some from Edmonton — the country’s two propane trading hubs.

The gas is critical to fuelling mining operations and heating facilities from water treatment plants to remote communicat­ions towers, though “people only think about it as barbecue,” St-Pierre said.

St-Pierre echoed various industry groups calling on the federal government for immediate action. Conductors, trainperso­ns and yard workers took to the picket lines early Tuesday morning, halting freight trains across the country.

The railway workers, who have been without a contract since July 23, have said they’re concerned about long hours, fatigue and what they consider dangerous working conditions.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Premier François Legault called on the prime minister and the opposition parties to pass back-to-work legislatio­n if needed.
JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS Premier François Legault called on the prime minister and the opposition parties to pass back-to-work legislatio­n if needed.

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