Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Court To Rule If B.C. Can Limit Bitumen In Key Case For Trans Mountain Pipeline

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 May, 2019 09:51 PM

    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia court is set to rule Friday whether the province can restrict shipments of diluted bitumen through its borders, in what will be a crucial decision for the future of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.


    The province filed a reference question to the B.C. Court of Appeal that asked whether it had the constitutional authority to create a permitting regime for companies that want to increase their flow of oilsands crude.


    B.C. argued the law is aimed at protecting its lands, rivers and lakes from hazardous substances, but Alberta and the federal government have said the goal is to delay or block the pipeline expansion.


    "It's a little bit strange to argue that diluted bitumen is such a dangerous product that it needs to be regulated, but it's only (an) entity that wants to increase its flow that falls under this particular scheme," said Eric Adams, a University of Alberta law professor.


    "Guess what that entity is? It's the Trans Mountain pipeline."


    The Trudeau government has purchased the pipeline and expansion project for $4.5 billion. Alberta sees it as an essential development to get more oilsands product to overseas markets, but B.C. opposes a three-fold increase of diluted bitumen through its territories.


    If B.C. is given the green light to enact amendments to its Environmental Management Act, it would be able to require Trans Mountain Corp. to obtain a so-called "hazardous substance permit" for its expansion.


    An application for a permit would have to detail the health and environmental risks of a spill, the measures in place to minimize those risks and financial measures, including insurance, to ensure capacity to respond.


    The corporation would also have to establish a fund for local governments and First Nations, giving them capacity to respond to a spill and agree to compensate anyone involved in responding.


    A provincial public servant would also be empowered to add conditions to the hazardous substance permit, as long as they were necessary to protect the environment and human health.


    If Trans Mountain fails to comply, the public servant could, with notice, suspend or cancel the permit.


    Adams, an expert in constitutional law, said federal and provincial governments have overlapping powers over environmental issues. However, he said everyone concedes that the federal government has exclusive jurisdiction over interprovincial pipelines.


    The question before the Appeal Court is how that power relates to B.C.'s authority to regulate what it says is a toxic substance within its borders, he said.


    "They're not actually regulating the pipeline at all, (B.C.) would say. They're regulating a dangerous product," he said. "Even if it happens to be in B.C. by virtue of a pipeline, that doesn't take away B.C.'s jurisdiction."


    But Adams noted that Premier John Horgan said on the campaign trail that he would use "every tool in the toolbox" to stop Trans Mountain. Once in power, Horgan softened his language to say he would use every tool to protect B.C.


    "It's not very difficult to connect the dots between this proposed legislation and a political attempt to stop a pipeline that falls within federal jurisdiction," Adams said.

    Canadian courts look at the full context when they're evaluating the dominant purpose of a law, he added. So even though those who drafted the B.C. legislation worked carefully to try to write it constitutionally, the public comments of government officials still matter.

    B.C. announced it would enact the legislative amendments in January 2018, sparking a trade war with then-Alberta premier Rachel Notley, who retaliated by banning B.C. wine from her province.


    Horgan eased the tension by promising to file a reference case that examined the constitutionality of the law, prompting Notley to end the wine ban in February 2018.


    The Appeal Court heard the case in March. Saskatchewan, Trans Mountain Corp. and Enbridge Inc. were among those who argued against B.C.'s proposed permitting regime, while First Nations, cities and environmental groups supported it.


    It might appear contradictory that B.C. recently filed a court challenge of Alberta's "turn off the taps" law that would give Premier Jason Kenney's government the ability to restrict gas shipments to B.C., said Adams.


    However, he said the B.C. government is on solid legal footing there because of a section in the constitution that prevents provinces from discriminating on supply or pricing to other areas of Canada.


    The story might not end with the ruling on Friday, Adams said. Either side could take the reference case to the Supreme Court of Canada, which must automatically agree to hear it.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Study Finds No Mental Health Benefits To Eating Human Placenta

    VANCOUVER — New research debunks the supposed mental health benefits of eating your own placenta.

    Canadian Study Finds No Mental Health Benefits To Eating Human Placenta

    Strategy 'Dramatically Exceeds' Target For More MRI Exams In B.C.: Minister

    Strategy 'Dramatically Exceeds' Target For More MRI Exams In B.C.: Minister
    The B.C. Surgical and Diagnostic Imaging Strategy includes a provision to operate magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, machines around the clock, with more than 233,000 exams done in the first year of the initiative.

    Strategy 'Dramatically Exceeds' Target For More MRI Exams In B.C.: Minister

    Get Ready For The Grind: Grouse Grind Opens For Season On Friday, May 3

    The mountainous trail is a 2.9-kilometre trail up the face of Grouse Mountain and is also referred to as 'Mother Nature's Stairmaster.'

    Get Ready For The Grind: Grouse Grind Opens For Season On Friday, May 3

    Hootsuite Cuts Jobs In Shift Of Priorities For The Social Media Management Business

    Hootsuite Cuts Jobs In Shift Of Priorities For The Social Media Management Business
     HootSuite Inc. says it has reduced its staffing levels as part of a reorganization of its social media management business. 

    Hootsuite Cuts Jobs In Shift Of Priorities For The Social Media Management Business

    Relatives To Launch Private Search For Plane Missing In B.C. Since 2017

    CRANBROOK, B.C. — Family members of a young couple missing in southeastern British Columbia for nearly two years hope a renewed search will bring some closure.    

    Relatives To Launch Private Search For Plane Missing In B.C. Since 2017

    Cat Freed From Edmonton Sinkhole, Other Feline Believed To Have Escaped

    Cat Freed From Edmonton Sinkhole, Other Feline Believed To Have Escaped
    A homeowner who has been on watch since discovering two cats trapped in a sinkhole on her property says at least one is free after 12 days.

    Cat Freed From Edmonton Sinkhole, Other Feline Believed To Have Escaped