Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Premier Notley Says Trans Mountain Pipeline May Need New Terminal For Support

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Oct, 2015 10:12 AM
  • Premier Notley Says Trans Mountain Pipeline May Need New Terminal For Support
CALGARY — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says Kinder Morgan Inc. may need to move the proposed terminal for the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion to win support for the project.
 
Speaking at a Bloomberg Live conference in New York, Bloomberg reported Wednesday that Notley said it could be better if the terminal were shifted further south rather than following the current pipeline's route through Burnaby in British Columbia's lower mainland.
 
Notley said a port near the Tsawwassen ferry terminal in Delta, B.C., could be a possibility, a suggestion that Vicki Huntington, the independent MLA for Delta South, rejected in a statement.
 
“It is unfortunate that Premier Notley has made such an ill-considered statement. Delta’s foreshore is a completely inappropriate location for the Kinder Morgan terminus, and would put the most valuable ecological habitat in Canada at risk," said Huntington.
 
Kinder Morgan maintains that the Trans Mountain project is an expansion of its existing pipeline and that its current Westridge terminal in Burnaby is the best option from both a financial and environmental perspective.
 
"Trans Mountain is confident that expanding our existing facilities is the best option, and the one we chose to pursue," the company wrote in a filing with the National Energy Board last year. "We feel Westridge terminal is the safest location that will also result in the least environmental impact."
 
In an email, Trans Mountain Expansion project spokeswoman Ali Hounsell said the company is not currently considering other terminal options and its application is only for an expansion of its current facility.
 
The Trans Mountain Expansion project would increase capacity on the pipeline between Edmonton and Burnaby from 300,000 barrels per day to 890,000 barrels per day.

MORE National ARTICLES

Making Hay While The Sun Shines: Feed Prices Go Up During Drought In The West

Making Hay While The Sun Shines: Feed Prices Go Up During Drought In The West
Hay producers are struggling to fill the demand for animal feed from  western livestock producers hit by this year's drought.

Making Hay While The Sun Shines: Feed Prices Go Up During Drought In The West

Restlessness Resumes On Toronto, U.S. Markets As China Volatility Continues

Restlessness Resumes On Toronto, U.S. Markets As China Volatility Continues
The Toronto Stock Exchange's main index showed a triple-digit gain within the first 10 minutes of trading Wednesday but that quickly evaporated.

Restlessness Resumes On Toronto, U.S. Markets As China Volatility Continues

Budgets And Balance Are Key Themes In Election Campaign Today

Budgets And Balance Are Key Themes In Election Campaign Today
Conservative Leader Stephen Harper is in rural eastern Ontario, where's he's promising to spend $200 million over seven years on expanded broadband Internet access for remote areas.

Budgets And Balance Are Key Themes In Election Campaign Today

Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death

Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death
Doctors who are willing to assist in a patient's death once the act becomes legal early next year will need to be trained because they've never been taught the procedures for ending a life, the Canadian Medical Association says.

Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death

First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant

First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant
LELU ISLAND, B.C. — Some members of a north coast First Nation are gathering on a small island near Prince Rupert, B.C., to protest plans for a liquefied natural gas project

First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant

Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians

Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians
OTTAWA — Upon quitting the Conservative caucus in the spring of 2013, Alberta MP Brent Rathgeber declared he no longer wanted to be treated like a "trained seal," parroting media talking points written for him by the Prime Minister's Office.

Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians