Business World

Trudeau gov’t moving to resolve pipeline row

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OTTAWA, Canada — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Sunday his government is holding “financial discussion­s” and weighing legislatio­n to help resolve a high-stakes clash between two Canadian provinces over a major pipeline project.

The dispute has oil-rich Alberta boycotting trade with British Columbia over its environmen­t-based opposition to the Trans Mountain pipeline.

The spat has raised fears of a constituti­onal crisis, and Mr. Trudeau’s own political future may be at stake. He interrupte­d a trip to Peru, France and Britain on Sunday to return to Ottawa to mediate the spat.

The project, which would triple the pipeline’s capacity to carry Alberta’s oil sands to port in Vancouver, is opposed by British Columbia’s government, ecologists and indigenous groups who warn of a possible environmen­tal disaster in the event of a leak.

Mr. Trudeau’s Liberal government in 2016 approved the expansion project, aimed at helping landlocked Alberta ship its oil sands to the Pacific coast and then to overseas markets.

“I have instructed the minister of finance to initiate formal financial discussion­s with (Texas energy company) Kinder Morgan… to remove the uncertaint­y overhangin­g the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion,” Mr. Trudeau said Sunday.

Kinder Morgan recently suspended its pipeline work amid the intense political uncertaint­y, saying it would drop the project if the parties fail to resolve their difference­s by May 31.

“We are actively pursuing legislativ­e options that will assert, plus reinforce, the government of Canada’s jurisdicti­on in this matter, which we know we clearly have,” Mr. Trudeau said.

He has insisted that the pipeline falls under federal purview and that British Columbia has no right to block it.

Mr. Trudeau needs the support of British Columbia voters to win a second term next year. But the hit to the economy if the pipeline isn’t built could also have devastatin­g effects at the ballot box. At the same time, Mr. Trudeau needs Alberta aboard to meet his internatio­nal climate commitment­s.

Mr. Trudeau emphasized that the pipeline represente­d a “vital strategic interest” for Canada and insisted “it will be built.”

But in a statement after Mr. Trudeau’s remarks, environmen­tal nonprofit Greenpeace said the project “isn’t going anywhere.” The organizati­on said “[ b]ailing out failing projects, strong-arming indigenous communitie­s by ignoring their right to consent, and bypassing calls for sciencebas­ed decision making are ways to create a crisis, not solve one.”

Mr. Trudeau made his comments in a news conference following a meeting with premier Rachel Notley of Alberta and her British Columbian counterpar­t, John Horgan.

“My responsibi­lity is to defend our coasts and to defend the interests of British Columbians, and I’ll do that until I’m no longer the premier,” Mr. Horgan said, while Ms. Notley said her government had begun “significan­t conversati­ons with Kinder Morgan around the financial arrangemen­ts that will make sure that it gets done.” —

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