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News > World

Canada Relaunches Pipeline Talks with Indigenous Tribes

  • An activist at a protest rally at the White House against the Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines in Washington, D.C.

    An activist at a protest rally at the White House against the Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines in Washington, D.C. | Photo: Reuters

Published 3 October 2018
Opinion

The planned pipeline has faced stiff opposition from environmentalists and Indigenous tribes worried that increased shipping from a marine terminal at the end of the route in Vancouver would impede the recovery of killer whale populations in the area.

Canada's resources minister said Wednesday Ottawa was relaunching consultations with Indigenous groups on the Trans Mountain pipeline to the Pacific after a court ruled the tribes get a say in the multi-billion dollar project.

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"We believe that we can and must move forward with engaging in a meaningful and focused consultation with Indigenous groups on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project," Natural Resources Minister Amarjeet Sohi told a press conference.

And so the government, he said, will "reinitiate (those) consultations with Indigenous groups impacted by the project."

Sohi added that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberal government — which has made reconciliation with Canada's indigenous peoples a priority — would seek to "dialogue and listen carefully to the concerns of indigenous peoples and offer accommodation if accommodation is possible."

The minister also claimed the government will not appeal the court ruling affirming the constitutional rights of Indigenous peoples to be consulted on commercial projects on their traditional lands.

Trudeau, speaking to reporters outside parliament, said an appeal was off the table because it "would take another few years before we could begin construction."

"We feel the blueprint the court laid out for (Trans Mountain) will allow us to get things done quicker and get our resources to new markets other than the United States in a more rapid fashion," he said.

The 1,150-kilometer pipeline was to move 890,000 barrels of oil a day from landlocked Alberta province to the Pacific coast for export, replacing a smaller crumbling conduit built in 1953.

The Trudeau administration approved the project in 2016 after an environmental review, saying it was in the "national interest" as it would help ease Canada's reliance on the U.S. market and get a better price for its crude oil.

Ottawa stepped in to buy the project for US$3.5 billion, effectively nationalizing it in a bid to bring a swift end to legal challenges and illegal protests at construction sites.

But the Federal Court of Appeal ruled that the government must take a second look at the project, taking greater care to consult with Indigenous tribes and consider marine traffic impacts.

Last month, Sohi sent the file back to the National Energy Board for reassessment, taking into account the impact of increased tanker traffic on endangered killer whales along the coast.

Once that review and Indigenous consultations are concluded, Trudeau's cabinet would have to decide again whether to greenlight the project.

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