Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
International

MLA Wants B.C. To Tear Up Pact Giving Ottawa Power Over Pipeline Reviews

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2015 10:58 PM
  • MLA Wants B.C. To Tear Up Pact Giving Ottawa Power Over Pipeline Reviews
VICTORIA — The Green party member of the British Columbia legislature has designed a loophole in recall legislation that he says would allow residents to regain control over approval of oil pipelines.
 
Andrew Weaver introduced a private member's bill that would help the B.C. government pull out of a controversial agreement that gives all power over such environmental assessments to the federal government.
 
He said his plan would provide B.C.'s government the ammunition to take strong action against a federal government likely to be inflamed by the move.
 
"It's actually giving the government a way out," Weaver said on Wednesday. "A process like this would allow the citizens of B.C. to demand that their government do it."
 
Weaver's proposal centres around regaining B.C.'s authority to conduct independent environmental assessments for projects like pipelines, mines and dams.
 
In 2010, the province signed a deal with the federal government that relinquished its approval authority, so that any environmental assessment carried out by a joint panel of federal agencies would also stand as B.C.'s evaluation.
 
Weaver wants the province to withdraw from that pact and return to holding its own reviews. The federal government would continue to produce its own approvals based on the current work done by National Energy Board and the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency.
 
Weaver's strategy involves building leverage to use with the federal government in the form of amendments to the Recall and Initiative Act — the same legislation that ultimately led to the repeal of the harmonized sales tax.
 
The bill would change the way initiatives work, so that a petition would only need signatures from a total of 15 per cent of registered voters provincewide. The current act has a more onerous threshold, requiring the signatures of ten per cent of registered voters in each of 85 electoral districts.
 
A successful petition under the amended act would still prompt either a debate in the legislature or a non-binding referendum.
 
Weaver would not lead the initiative should his bill pass, but rather urge the public to take it on.
 
"This is essentially saying 'We do not trust a process that is allowing an external jurisdiction to determine our future,'" he said. "'We want to determine our own future.'"
 
Environment Minister Mary Polak said her government has no plans to consider Weaver's proposal.
 
She stood behind the decision to enter the equivalency agreement, noting that at least in the case of Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, the project is interprovincial and so the federal government would retain "final jurisdiction."
 
"We believe there should be one project and one process," she said of the multibillion-dollar proposal, which has prompted ongoing protests from First Nations and environmentalists as its assessment continues.

MORE International ARTICLES

US court dismisses case against Modi

US court dismisses case against Modi
A US court has dismissed a lawsuit accusing Prime Minister Narendra Modi of failure to control the 2002 Gujarat riots, saying as a sitting head of government...

US court dismisses case against Modi

Al-Qaeda video on Paris attacks authentic: US

Al-Qaeda video on Paris attacks authentic: US
An Al-Qaeda video claiming responsibility for the last week's bloodshed at the French satirical newspaper was "authentic", but US officials were...

Al-Qaeda video on Paris attacks authentic: US

India is arrogant, says Pakistan

India is arrogant, says Pakistan
A top Pakistani officer has accused India of "arrogance" and described Kashmir as a "festering wound" between the two countries....

India is arrogant, says Pakistan

Military court to hear Malala attack case

Military court to hear Malala attack case
The 2012 attack on Nobel Peace Award winner and child activist Malala Yousafzai case would be heard at military court in Peshawar when it formally...

Military court to hear Malala attack case

Man arrested for planning attack on US Congress

Man arrested for planning attack on US Congress
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrested Wednesday a US man they say was inspired by the actions of the Islamic State (IS) group to devise...

Man arrested for planning attack on US Congress

Ikea recalls baby mattresses in US after reports of infants getting trapped

Ikea recalls baby mattresses in US after reports of infants getting trapped
STOCKHOLM — Furniture retailer Ikea says it's recalling 169,000 baby crib mattresses in the U.S. and Canada after receiving two reports of infants getting trapped between the mattress and the end panels.

Ikea recalls baby mattresses in US after reports of infants getting trapped