Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tensions High During Quebec's Environmental Hearings Into Energy East Pipeline

The Canadian Press, 20 Mar, 2016 02:33 PM
    LEVIS, Que. — As Luc Villeneuve begins talking to a reporter about his renewable energy foundation, he is abruptly interrupted outside the conference room where public hearings on Energy East are taking place.
     
    "You didn't come here in an electric car, did you?" truck driver Michel Morin asks in a taunting voice.
     
    Villeneuve, 46, a little shaken, replies he would love to buy such a car.
     
    "But there is oil in the car you drove here, isn't there?" Morin aggressively counters, before storming off into the room where TransCanada vice-president Louis Bergeron is trying to assuage local concerns about the proposed pipeline.
     
    Villeneuve smiles and says, "He's been after me for days. I don't know that guy's name but he hates all environmentalists."
     
    On Friday, Quebec's environmental review agency wrapped up two weeks of hearings into the Energy East proposal by TransCanada (TSX: TRP). More hearings are scheduled to begin April 25.
     
    Every day, Quebecers lined up at the back of the room inside a modern hockey complex across the St. Lawrence River from Quebec City in order to register to grill Bergeron and officials from the National Energy Board and Environment and Climate Change Canada.
     
    The hearings were civil but tense as the majority of participants voiced either outright opposition to the pipeline or high levels of skepticism about TransCanada's promises to safely transport 1.1 million of barrels of oil daily through Quebec territory.
     
    Many of the participants were retired, middle-class parents who started their own environmental organizations out of their basements.
     
    Irene Dupuis, 65, a retired elementary school teacher, co-founded her environmental group with her sister, Carole.
     
    "Under what circumstances is TransCanada not responsible for spills?" she asked the commission. "What if its IT system is hacked, what about vandalism, earthquakes?"
     
    Bergeron said a new federal law coming into effect this summer stipulates companies like his will be entirely responsible for up to $1 billion in cleanup costs associated with a spill, regardless of who is at fault.
     
    "What about if a spill costs $1.1 billion?" Dupuis pressed, ignoring the one-question rule.
     
     
    TransCanada will still have to pay upfront but can try and recoup the money from those responsible, Bergeron said.
     
    Outside the conference room, Dupuis said TransCanada's promises mean little to her.
     
    "Every day when I drive my grandson to daycare, he asks me about the colour of the St. Lawrence River," she said. 'Why is it blue today?' he asks me. 'Why is it greyish today?' I don't want him to ask me one day why it's black."
     
    Denis Desmeules, 59, a retired health-care worker, volunteers for a Quebec City-area environmental group that opposes pipelines.
     
    "The science shows us global warming is real," he said. "So when will we stop?
     
    "The people who work in the industry, they want a salary, they want to pay for their car, they want to work. Environmentalists threaten their livelihoods."
     
    One of those threatened is Morin, who after calming down from his encounter with Villeneuve, lights a cigarette outside the hockey complex and discusses his frustrations.
     
    "I have no problem with environmentalists," says the truck driver. "But they should arrive here on foot or in electric cars if they are going to criticize oil and pipelines.
     
    "I am for the pipeline. It moves the economy. It gives us work." 
     
    He says Quebecers want expensive services but refuse major projects that can pay for them.
     
    "We can't have it all," he argues. "Daycares at $7 a day paid for with money from other provinces. We want parental leave for men. Then we reject energy projects."
     
    TransCanada wants to build a 4,600-kilometre pipeline from Alberta and Saskatchewan's oil deposits to a marine terminal in New Brunswick.
     
    In between, the pipeline is supposed to cross hundreds of kilometres of Quebec territory, connecting to refineries in Montreal and Quebec City.
     
    Final approval rests with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's cabinet after a review by the federal National Energy Board.
     
    Quebec's environmental review board is scheduled to produce a report in November. While its recommendations are not legally binding, Trudeau will have a difficult time green-lighting the project if it's rejected in Quebec.
     
    Real Picard, 72, a former worker at Quebec's City's Valero oil refinery, said he's for the pipeline — "with conditions."
     
    He said he's worried about corrosion but that what concerns him most is the threat of another event like the one nearly three years ago that overshadows much of the discussion on energy projects in Quebec.
     
     
    A recent report says many residents of Lac-Megantic were still suffering nearly 30 months after an oil-train derailment killed 47 people in July 2013.
     
    "Lac-Megantic wouldn't have happened if that oil was being transported by pipeline," Picard said. "The pipelines will take some of the trains away."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Help For Bombardier Pitched By Premiers Couillard And Wynne

    Federal Help For Bombardier Pitched By Premiers Couillard And Wynne
    The premiers of Canada's two most populous provinces have joined forces to push for federal help for Bombardier's CSeries aircraft.

    Federal Help For Bombardier Pitched By Premiers Couillard And Wynne

    Vancouver Police Say Suspicious Device Located In Downtown Vehicle Not Explosive

    Vancouver Police Say Suspicious Device Located In Downtown Vehicle Not Explosive
    Police had asked the public to stay away from a downtown area that was blocked to traffic

    Vancouver Police Say Suspicious Device Located In Downtown Vehicle Not Explosive

    Calgary Woman Carries Out Doctor-Assisted Death In British Columbia

    The woman, who cannot be identified because of a court-ordered publication ban, died on Monday with her family at her side

    Calgary Woman Carries Out Doctor-Assisted Death In British Columbia

    Electric Cars In B.C. To Get HOV Green Light, Bypass Occupancy Requirements

    Electric Cars In B.C. To Get HOV Green Light, Bypass Occupancy Requirements
    Drivers who go electric in British Columbia are about to get the green light to travel the province's high occupancy vehicle lanes passenger free.

    Electric Cars In B.C. To Get HOV Green Light, Bypass Occupancy Requirements

    Ontario Man, 3 Foreign Nationals Arrested In Attempted Smuggling Into Canada

    Ontario Man, 3 Foreign Nationals Arrested In Attempted Smuggling Into Canada
    A Cornwall, Ont., man and three foreign nationals have been arrested in what border officials say was an attempt to smuggle people from the United States into Canada.

    Ontario Man, 3 Foreign Nationals Arrested In Attempted Smuggling Into Canada

    Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast

    Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast
    An analysis by one of Canada's biggest banks says the federal government is on track to run $150 billion in budgetary deficits over the next five years.

    Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast