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B.C. Premier John Horgan Says He Won't Escalate Trade Dispute With Alberta Over Pipeline

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Feb, 2018 12:18 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier John Horgan doesn't intend to respond to any provocation from Alberta in the escalating trade dispute over the Trans Mountain pipeline.
     
    Horgan said Wednesday it is not in anyone's interests to fuel the spat between the two provinces.
     
    "I hope that we would see the end of the back-and-forth," he told a news conference in Victoria. "I deliberately wasn't available to you yesterday because I don't think it's in anyone's interests to have duelling premiers."
     
    The B.C. government is looking at restricting the expansion of bitumen through the province until it's satisfied a spill can be cleaned up, which was countered by the threat of a lawsuit from Alberta along with a ban on B.C. wine imports.
     
    More details on the B.C. government's intentions are expected by the end of the month, Horgan said.
     
    He said officials from Ottawa will meet with deputy ministers from the B.C. government on Thursday to clarify the province's rights over the jurisdictional dispute.
     
    "It's not the government's intention to respond in any way to the provocation," he said. "We're going to focus on the issues that matters to British Columbians and hope that cooler heads on the other side of the Rockies prevail."
     
    While the dispute between B.C. and Alberta simmered Wednesday, reaction continued to boil.
     
    Ian Anderson, the president of Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd., called on Ottawa to step into the dispute over the company's pipeline expansion project between Edmonton and Burnaby, B.C.
     
    "I think that asserting their federal jurisdiction in whatever manner they determine is most effective and most appropriate is something I'll be looking for, so that we get past the words of support, to the actions of support that we're all chasing hard," he said
     
    Trudeau said talks continue out of public sight with the provinces.
     
    "We're making sure we come to the right place that's in the national interest for Canada," he said.
     
    Premier Rachel Notley's announcement on a ban on B.C. wine imports Tuesday came after her government's decision to stop electricity talks with B.C.
     
    Anderson said he sent a letter this week to Horgan about his concerns for the province's plans and its implications for the $7.4-billion Trans Mountain project that would almost triple the capacity of the pipeline.
     
    "We are calling on the premier to think very serious about the severity of the actions and the path that they're undertaking here. I don't think anyone is missing the agenda that they're pursuing."
     
    Speaking in French after a government caucus meeting in Ottawa, Environment Minister Catherine McKenna suggested solutions are being worked on behind the scenes.
     
    In Victoria, Horgan said while he and Notley may both be New Democrats, that is a secondary consideration.
     
    "It's well known that premier Notley and I have been friends in the past. It's well know that we share the same political flag," he said. "But at the end of the day, that's secondary to my obligations to the people of British Columbia."
     
    The two other Western provinces expressed concern about the trade dispute between neighbours.
     
    Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe backed Alberta in its fight but he cautioned against additional trade measures that hurt consumers and private businesses.
     
    "Saskatchewan has no plans to participate in retaliatory measures that would be in contravention of our trade commitments," he said on Facebook.
     
    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister promoted open trade among the provinces as well in a statement, noting that the National Energy Board and the federal cabinet approved Trans Mountain after determining it was in the national interest.
     
    "This uncertainty is decidedly unhelpful to economic development in Western Canada and for the general well-being of the Canadian federation," said Pallister.
     
    "Whether it's a pipeline or a transmission line, markets and investors need certainty. They don't react well to either overlapping processes or backward steps."
     
     
    WINE WAR PICKS ON SMALL FAMILY OWNED OPERATIONS: B.C. WINE ADVOCATE
     
     
     
     
    VANCOUVER — Western Canada's "wine war" could cost small family owned farms millions of dollars, says an advocate for British Columbia's wine industry.
     
    Alberta Premier Rachel Notley announced Tuesday that her government is banning B.C. wine in a spat between the two provinces over the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline.
     
    Independent producers will bear the brunt of the prohibition, said Miles Prodan, president of the B.C. Wine Institute.
     
    The Alberta government isn't aiming its anger at multinational corporations with shareholders, Prodan said. 
     
    "They're harming actual small farmers, which is ironic coming from a province like Alberta that understands agriculture and farming and all that goes into that. Why they're picking on fellow farmers is hard to understand."
     
    Alberta is the second biggest wine market for the industry outside of B.C. itself, selling an estimated retail value of $160 million each year, Prodan said.
     
    Jan Nelson with Tinhorn Creek Vineyards near Oliver, B.C., said they send about 15 per cent of their production to Alberta every year and the ban will cost them about $100,000 per month.
     
    "In the short term, I'm pretty sure we can find a happy customer to enjoy the wine. But that's not a sales strategy, so I'm hoping this turns around pretty quickly," he said.
     
    Tinhorn Creek gets about 40,000 visitors each year, about 25 per cent of those tourists come from Alberta, Nelson said.
     
    "I'm sure it will affect some people in the long term, but I'm hoping most people will be able to look past a political issue and just enjoy the wine that they've come to love," he said.
     
    Jason Ocenas with Township 7 Wine said his products are sold in liquor stores and shipped directly to customers in Alberta, and finding another market will be difficult.
     
    At least one Albertan stocked up to weather the storm, he added, saying a man came to their vineyard in Langley, B.C., on Tuesday to grab a few bottles on his way home.
     
    That shouldn't have to be the case, Ocenas said.
     
    "We should be celebrating the pairings of B.C. wine and Alberta beef and putting that on a world market, not having a minor spat over something like this," he said.
     
    "Alberta doesn't grow grapes, so they don't do wine. The same way we drink their rye and eat their beef, we celebrate what they do and they celebrate what we do. And it would be nice if we could continue that."
     
    At least one restaurant in Alberta has vowed to continue serving B.C. wine.
     
    "Trade politics routinely crush the 'little guys,' and we are deeply concerned about the handful of B.C. farmers we proudly work with," Edmonton restaurant Clementine said in an Instagram post on Tuesday.
     
    "Access to these wines is essential to us, as we are able to support their efforts directly and help build the sort of food community that lies at the centre of why we even exist as a restaurant."
     
    People across the country have taken to social media to pledge their own support, using hashtags like #WarOfTheRosès and #PinotNotPipelines alongside photos of B.C. wine.
     
    Ocenas said the attention is great, but he's concerned about what will happen when the buzz fades.
     
    "If this is something that will carry on for awhile, it could be a big problem for some B.C. wineries," he said.
     
    Industry advocates will look to British Columbia's government for solutions to the ban, Prodan said, including better access to shelf space in government-run liquor stores.
     
    Still, he said Notley's sudden announcement came as a surprise, particularly because his group has been working with Alberta in recent years to expand direct-to-consumer access for B.C. wineries.
     
    Advocates had been carefully watching negotiations on the North American Free Trade agreement, concerned a new deal could mean for access to American markets, Prodan said.
     
    There was no inkling that problems were fermenting within Canada, he added.
     
    "To have this happen with our friends and colleagues across the border in Alberta is a complete surprise."

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