Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Government Will 'Get It Right' On Getting Oil, Gas To Tidewater, Says Jim Carr

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2016 12:11 PM
    OTTAWA — Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr acknowledges there's considerable urgency to building new Canadian pipeline capacity to tidewater, even as new roadblocks continue to appear.
     
    A B.C. Supreme Court ruling this week and discouraging signals from B.C.'s provincial government have further undermined the prospects of two proposed oil pipelines to the Pacific coast, just as Carr is taking part in intense briefings on his new portfolio in Justin Trudeau's Liberal government.
     
    Carr's mandate includes expanding Canada's market access for oil and gas — a highly polarizing public policy debate — and his challenge comes amid a global oil glut that is cratering international prices and killing investment in Alberta's oilpatch.
     
    The natural resources minister is also charged with re-tooling the National Energy Board and environmental assessments in an effort to restore broad public confidence in the way major resource projects are approved.
     
    "Believe me, nobody is lollygagging," Carr told The Canadian Press in an interview this week from Winnipeg.
     
    "We understand the importance of the moment ... and I also understand the opportunity. So we're working intensely and collaboratively across the government and we're determined to get it right in a timely way."
     
    His comments come as federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau is in Calgary on pre-budget consultations, where the Liberals can expect to get a cold blast of get-it-done impatience.
     
    The Liberals are signalling they'd like to speed up the timetable for major government infrastructure spending, given the continuing economic downturn. At the same time, they continue to grapple with continuing delays in approving pipelines — shovel-ready, multibillion-dollar long-term infrastructure projects fully funded by the private sector.
     
    With the benchmark price of oil slipping below $30 a barrel, dragging down the Canadian dollar with it, the new national government is staring down the barrel of a budget deficit that threatens to balloon into the tens of billions of dollars.
     
    And reports this week suggest Liberal ambitions for a new free trade deal with China may hinge in part on Chinese demands for a new export oil pipeline to tidewater.
     
    Events are all conspiring to ratchet up pressure on the Trudeau Liberals for a Nixon-to-China move on a major pipeline approval that eluded the Alberta-based, oil-and-gas-boosting Conservative government of Stephen Harper during almost a decade in office.
     
    But the Liberals have also promised a new era of environmental responsibility and broad public consultation, which Carr insists remain integral to the government's plan.
     
    "It's important that we move as quickly as we can while being responsible — by ensuring that we've consulted with people who are part of the movement going forward to ensure that Canada is able to move its resources to market sustainably," said the minister.
     
    All that collaboration and consultation, Carr added, must be "mindful of the importance of Canada's competitiveness position and that moving our resources to market in a sustainable way is also part of our mandate."
     
    Reminded of the cautionary saying about living in times of turmoil, Carr agreed there's a lot on the boil.
     
    "So you're right, these are interesting times and they're important times," said the former CEO of the of Business Council of Manitoba.
     
    "But I also choose to see them as a time of opportunity."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Rachel Notley Says Trudeau Win, Harper Loss Reveals Strength Of Positive Campaigning

    Rachel Notley Says Trudeau Win, Harper Loss Reveals Strength Of Positive Campaigning
    Notley spoke a day after Justin Trudeau and the federal Liberals defeated Harper's Conservatives with an upbeat message of change that led to a majority government.

    Rachel Notley Says Trudeau Win, Harper Loss Reveals Strength Of Positive Campaigning

    Saskatchewan Premier Not Disappointed With Election Results; Says No To Conservative Leadership

    "It's flattering when you hear people say that and it's humbling, it really is. But no, the answer is no," Wall said Tuesday in Regina.

    Saskatchewan Premier Not Disappointed With Election Results; Says No To Conservative Leadership

    RCMP Used 'closer' To Finish Undercover B.C. Terror Operation: Senior Mountie

    RCMP Used 'closer' To Finish Undercover B.C. Terror Operation: Senior Mountie
    Insp. Stephen Corcoran has told B.C. Supreme Court that Staff-Sgt. Vaz Kassam joined the operation in June 2013, one week before a couple was arrested for plotting to bomb the B.C. Legislature on Canada Day.

    RCMP Used 'closer' To Finish Undercover B.C. Terror Operation: Senior Mountie

    Guru Granth Sahib Sacrilege: Punjab Police Arrest 2 Accused, Allege Foreign Hand, Funding

    Guru Granth Sahib Sacrilege: Punjab Police Arrest 2 Accused, Allege Foreign Hand, Funding
    The Punjab Police on Tuesday said it has arrested two brothers for alleged involvement in the desecration of the Guru Granth Sahib and revealed they were getting instructions and funding from handlers in Australia and Dubai.

    Guru Granth Sahib Sacrilege: Punjab Police Arrest 2 Accused, Allege Foreign Hand, Funding

    One Man Critically Injured In Targeted Shooting In B.C.'s North Okanagan

    One Man Critically Injured In Targeted Shooting In B.C.'s North Okanagan
    A 55-year-old man remains in hospital with critical gunshot wounds after an attack near Enderby, B.C.

    One Man Critically Injured In Targeted Shooting In B.C.'s North Okanagan

    Liberal Wave Reaches Metro Vancouver As Rest Of B.C. Splits Along Party Lines

    Liberal Wave Reaches Metro Vancouver As Rest Of B.C. Splits Along Party Lines
    The map of election winners in British Columbia mirrored the political spectrum after Monday's election — NDP on the left, Conservatives on the right and Liberals down the middle.

    Liberal Wave Reaches Metro Vancouver As Rest Of B.C. Splits Along Party Lines