Vancouver Sun

Transporta­tion corridor needed for Asia- bound oil, gas: report

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Canada needs to explore developmen­t of a public- private energy transporta­tion corridor to export oil and gas to the Asia- Pacific region, suggests a report issued Wednesday by two special-interest groups.

The transporta­tion corridor would consist of a combinatio­n of pipelines and rail transporta­tion to Canada’s west coast, operated by the private sector but regulated as a kind of public utility, the report suggests.

The report was released by a group sponsored by the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada and the Canada West Foundation.

Some of the infrastruc­ture exists and several companies plan to build more, but the report says there needs to be a broader, more strategic approach.

“A commitment to invest in hard and soft infrastruc­ture to export energy is a prerequisi­te for closer economic ties with Asia. Developing a public energy transporta­tion corridor constitute­d by government, regulated as a kind of public utility, and operated by the private sector merits further study.

“This corridor could consist of a combinatio­n of pipelines and rail transporta­tion for oil and gas to the west coast.”

Similar calls for a Canadian energy strategy have been made recently by Alberta Premier Alison Redford in a meeting with other western provincial premiers.

The energy industry has also been in favour of looking beyond the United States and Canada.

However, plans to build the Gateway pipeline system between Alberta and Kitimat have been opposed by a variety of environmen­tal and first nations groups — resulting in months of public hearings.

The federal government, led by Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver, has promised to speed up the regulatory approval process by eliminatin­g duplicatio­n of efforts and creating hard deadlines for completing approvals within two years.

Kathy Sendall, director of CGG Veritas and a co- chairwoman of the panel that produced the report, said in Wednesday’s announceme­nt that “we can no longer be complacent in how we deal with Asia on the energy file.

The other co- chairman of the panel is Kevin Lynch, a vice- chairman of the BMO Financial Group, one of Canada’s largest banking companies.

 ?? NORM BETTS/ BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Some of the infrastruc­ture required to export Canadian energy products via Canada’s west coast already exists, but requires expansion and coordinati­on.
NORM BETTS/ BLOOMBERG FILES Some of the infrastruc­ture required to export Canadian energy products via Canada’s west coast already exists, but requires expansion and coordinati­on.

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