Vancouver Sun

First Nations to Ottawa: This project is dead

Four groups officially reject Northern Gateway plans during emotional meeting with federal agencies

- DENE MOORE

A group of First Nations with territory covering a quarter of the route for the proposed Northern Gateway oil pipeline met with federal representa­tives Friday to officially reject the project.

Officials with the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency, the National Energy Board and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans met with the four clans of the Yinka Dene in Fort St. James, and listened as dozens of elders, hereditary and elected chiefs said “No.”

“We do not, we will not, allow this pipeline,” Peter Erickson, a hereditary chief of the Nak’azdli First Nation, told the six federal bureaucrat­s.

“We’re going to send the message today to the federal government and to the company itself: Their pipeline is dead. Under no circumstan­ces will

We do not, we will not, allow this pipeline. We’re going to send the message today to the federal government and to the company itself: Their pipeline is dead.

PETER ERICKSON HEREDITARY CHIEF, NAK’AZDLI FIRST NATION

that proposal be allowed.

“Their pipeline is now a pipe dream.”

Karen Ogan, chief of the Wet’suwet’en, thanked the Crown representa­tives for listening. During the often emotional meeting, Ogan touched on the country’s checkered past with First Nations and its role in the dispute.

“Some people may come from an anger perspectiv­e because we’ve been bulldozed, we’ve been run over all through history, through colonizati­on, and today we want our voice to be heard,” Ogan told the six bureaucrat­s during the daylong meeting.

The bands said the project is now banned from Yinka Dene territorie­s, under their traditiona­l laws.

Members young and old of the Nadleh Whut’en, Nak’azdli, Saik’uz, Takla Lake, Tl’azt’en and Wet’suwet’en communitie­s were unanimous. They said the decision by the four clans marks the end of negotiatio­ns.

The pipeline project faces a major hurdle in getting First Nations on board, but behind the scenes negotiator­s have continued talking with many groups. The company has also signed several benefits agreements with First Nations, although few of them admit publicly to the deals.

The Yinka Dene has spearheade­d a petition against the pipeline that has been signed by 160 First Nations groups in B. C. — most not located near the proposed pipeline route.

Last month, the company announced that it had asked former conservati­ve minister of Indian affairs Jim Prentice to try to mediate deals with First Nations opposed to the project.

The $ 6- billion, nearly 1,200- kilometre pipeline would deliver 525,000 barrels of petroleum a day from Edmonton to a tanker terminal in Kitimat.

The federal government claims Canada is losing billions of dollars a year because western Canadian oil is not reaching markets overseas. Enbridge has said Northern Gateway is expected to expand Canadian GDP by more than $ 300 billion over 30 years.

But the pipeline became a lightning rod in the debate over global climate change and raised alarm over the possibilit­y of an oil spill.

A federal review panel recommende­d approval of the pipeline with 209 conditions. A final decision is expected from the federal government in June but several B. C. First Nations have filed appeals with the Federal Court seeking to overturn the panel recommenda­tion.

The challenge for the company does not lie solely in First Nations communitie­s. Several municipali­ties in northern B. C. have voted to oppose the project — Terrace, Prince Rupert and Smithers.

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