British Columbia political alliance vows to block pipeline expansion

VICTORIA, British Columbia,  (Reuters) – The two parties set to take power in Canada’s Pacific province of British Columbia vowed yesterday to block Kinder Morgan Inc’s plans to expand an oil pipeline, setting up a fight with energy-rich Alberta and the federal government.

The Greens and left-leaning New Democrats, or NDP, who have sealed a deal to unseat Liberal Premier Christy Clark following an inconclusive election, oppose plans to almost triple the capacity of the Trans Mountain line’s capacity.

The parties said they would use “every tool available” to stop the expansion of a pipeline designed to carry crude from Alberta’s oil sands to the west coast.

Prolonged battles over Trans Mountain and other crude pipelines are raising questions over the viability of new energy projects in British Columbia. Clark conceded yesterday she was facing defeat, giving the New Democrats and Greens, who hold 44 of the 87 legislative seats, a chance to govern.

Alberta’s premier warned against attempts to veto the pipeline, ratcheting up political tension that helped undermine the stock market debut of Kinder Morgan’s Canadian unit.

While there is some dispute over whether British Columbia has a formal veto right, it can raise hurdles that could effectively make the pipeline impossible to build.

British Columbia Greens leader Andrew Weaver said the new government would be consulting provincial bureaucrats on issues around permitting.

The province could revoke the project’s environmental assessment certificate, deny routine construction permits or introduce laws to subject the pipeline to more assessments, said University of British Columbia law professor Jocelyn Stacey.

“The more complicated this gets, then market forces take over, and this becomes a financial calculation (for Kinder Morgan investors) – whether the project goes ahead,” she said.

The project would increase Pacific exports of Canada’s landlocked crude, a move that would help the country’s large oil industry. It has met opposition from environmentalists and aboriginal groups in British Colombia who are worried about oil spills from the increase in tanker traffic it would cause.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, whose Liberal government approved Trans Mountain last November, stood by the project yesterday. His party is not affiliated with the British Columbia Liberals.

The Canadian Constitution allows Trudeau in theory to declare the project to be for “the general advantage of Canada,” which would let Ottawa take control. That could trigger political outrage among provincial governments, which have wide-ranging powers.

“Mark my words, that pipeline will be built. The decision has been made,” Alberta New Democratic Premier Rachel Notley told reporters, saying British Columbia’s economy could not just rely on an overheated property market and needed the jobs the pipeline would create.

Weaver retorted that promises of natural resources projects creating plenty of jobs were as unlikely as “unicorns in all our backyards.”

Kinder Morgan declined to comment.

British Columbia NDP leader John Horgan, who would become premier under the agreement with the Greens, has expressed reservations about a $27 billion liquefied natural gas terminal that Malaysia’s Petronas wants to build in northern British Columbia. Petronas declined to comment.

Yesterday’s power-sharing agreement did not make specific reference to the province’s LNG industry or to the Petronas project.

Shares in Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd fell as much as 7.4 percent on their debut in heavy trading on Tuesday before recovering ground to close down 4.4 percent at C$16.24.

Kinder Morgan spun off the unit to help finance the expansion of the pipeline. The firm raised C$1.75 billion ($1.30 billion) in the initial public offering at C$17 per share last week.