Canadian Manufacturing

Environment Minister outlines pipeline protections ahead of B.C court reference

by The Canadian Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Manufacturing Operations Regulation Risk & Compliance Energy Oil & Gas


In an attempt to placate the B.C. government and put an end to its opposition of the Trans Mountain pipeline, Catherine McKenna is proposing a joint Ottawa-B.C. panel of scientists to study oil spills and incident response

OTTAWA—Environment Minister Catherine McKenna is floating the idea of a joint Ottawa-B.C. panel of scientists to enhance existing research on oil spills as the federal government continues pressing its case for the Trans Mountain expansion project.

McKenna is making the proposal to B.C. Environment Minister George Heyman just as the province prepares to unveil the question it will ask the Court of Appeal as it tries to limit the flow of oil through the expanded pipeline.

B.C.’s efforts to block the $7.4-billion project prompted the builder, Kinder Morgan, to halt spending until Ottawa can convince skittish investors that it will go ahead.

In a letter released today, McKenna says Ottawa has already taken steps to mitigate the damage in the event of a spill, including increased capacity to tow ships and five new emergency response stations, and says she is willing to address some of B.C.’s additional concerns.

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If B.C. is interested, she says Canada would also consider a joint scientific advisory panel to take stock of the science available on oil spills, including current models of how to respond in the event of an incident involving a number of different petroleum products.

McKenna also says B.C.’s consultation paper on oil spill management left out the federal policies and programs she says prove why the federal government believes the pipeline is safe.

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