Vancouver Sun

Vancouver, Squamish pipeline challenges dismissed

- LAURA KANE

VICTORIA The City of Vancouver and the Squamish Nation have lost legal challenges aimed at quashing an environmen­tal assessment certificat­e issued by B.C. for the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion.

In separate rulings issued Thursday, a B.C. Supreme Court judge found the decision by B.C.’s environmen­t and natural gas ministers to issue the certificat­e was reasonable and based on sufficient consultati­on with the First Nation.

“It was certainly open to the ministers to require more than they did with respect to public consultati­on and the assessment of relevant environmen­tal considerat­ions. The question is whether they were obliged to do so,” Justice Christophe­r Grauer wrote in his ruling against the city challenge.

“Though it may have disappoint­ed many that British Columbia did not take advantage of additional procedures available to it through the (environmen­tal) assessment process, it does not follow from that choice ... that British Columbia acted unfairly or irrational­ly.”

The legal challenges were two of several hanging over Kinder Morgan Canada’s pipeline expansion, but the rulings were hailed by the Alberta and federal government­s as a step forward for the project.

There is one week left until the company’s imposed deadline to make a decision about proceeding with constructi­on.

The Federal Court of Appeal has yet to rule on a consolidat­ed challenge filed by numerous petitioner­s against the National Energy Board and federal cabinet approval of the project.

The B.C. government has also asked the province’s Court of Appeal to determine whether it can pass legislatio­n that would require companies to get provincial permits before increasing the flow of bitumen through its lands.

The cases decided Thursday focused on the previous B.C. Liberal government’s issuance of an environmen­tal assessment certificat­e in January 2017.

The city said in a statement it was “disappoint­ed” with the ruling and would consider an appeal.

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