Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. pushes back on Alberta's pipeline pitch as premiers, PM meet in Saskatoon

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jun, 2025 01:36 PM
  • B.C. pushes back on Alberta's pipeline pitch as premiers, PM meet in Saskatoon

British Columbia is pushing back against Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's proposal for a bitumen pipeline to B.C.'s northern coast.

It's expected to be a focus of Prime Minister Mark Carney's meeting Monday with premiers in Saskatoon, where the assembled leaders are discussing a draft list of "national interest" projects to be fast-tracked through the approval process.

Smith said any project list that doesn't include new pipelines would send a bad message to Alberta as separatist sentiment flares up in that province.

Smith said she wants to see a bitumen pipeline built to ship oil to the Port of Prince Rupert on B.C.'s northern coast.

B.C. deputy premier Niki Sharma pointed out Monday that Smith's pipeline proposal has "no proponent at this stage" and said her province is pursuing "shovel-ready" projects.

"Although we have differences of opinion with respect to that, we're focused on where we can find alignment," Sharma said on her way into Monday's meeting.

"We're going to be focused on shovel-ready projects in B.C. that we can bring forward and we know will have a really solid impact on the economy."

B.C. Premier David Eby is not at the meeting. He is in Asia for a preplanned trade mission.

Smith said that nine federal policies, including the oil and gas emissions cap and the tanker ban on B.C.'s northern coast, discourage companies from proposing pipeline projects in Canada. She wants the Carney government to eliminate those polices.

"The problem is unless we address the nine terrible policies that have damaged investor confidence, we're not going to get the proponents coming forward with major investments," she said.

Carney vowed during the election campaign to slash federal approval times on major infrastructure projects in the "national interest" to help make the country an "energy superpower" as the country adjusts to ever-changing tariffs imposed by the U.S.

Legislation to make that infrastructure push a reality is expected to be introduced in the House of Commons as early as this week.

"We're in the process of redefining our relationship with the United States," Carney said at the beginning of Monday's meeting.

"That's what this meeting is about, building a stronger Canadian economy, a one Canadian economy."

The prime minister and the premiers are keeping the full list of projects under discussion a secret because they don't want to send negative signals about anything that doesn't make the short list.

On his way into the meeting Monday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said the idea of a pipeline to B.C.'s northern coast would be discussed.

"Hopefully we can get it out west, so we can get to the Asian market, but we have to get it north and we have to get it east as well," Ford said.

Ford said it's "absolutely critical" that Canada expand its export markets.

The Ring of Fire mining project in northern Ontario is among Ford's main priorities heading into the meeting.

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said he hopes that Carney's push to make Canada an "energy superpower" can help stem rising western alienation. Moe said that in order for this to happen, the regulatory environment will need to change.

"Policies do matter, and I think that's proved out in Saskatchewan over the last decade or decade-and-a-half with the mining investments that we've been able to attract. But policies do matter. And so we are going to need a shift in policies in order for that to happen," Moe said.

New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt said Smith’s pitch to fast-track a pipeline aligns with Carney's agenda.

“I think that that's exactly what the prime minister is talking about - nation-building projects to make us an energy superpower, build the kind of trade infrastructure that lets Canada really thrive,” she said.

“Out in the East and in New Brunswick, we know a lot about this because we're looking to connect our electricity infrastructure to build the connections that we need … to Nova Scotia and P.E.I. and Quebec and the U.S., so that the kind of energy that we're developing can reach the rest of the country."

Quebec has opposed pipelines in the past and Premier François Legault said that any new pipeline projects that would run through the province need to be examined closely.

"So we need to see what's the economic impact for Quebec, what is the impact on the environment. So what I say is that if there is a project going through Quebec, we'll study it," Legault said.

When asked about Smith's demands, Legault said he was invited to the meeting by Carney, not Smith, and he hadn't seen any concrete proposal for a new pipeline.

With differing demands from the 13 premiers, there will have to be compromises if Carney's vision of building a "one Canada economy" is going to work out.

Northwest Territories Premier R.J. Simpson said that, with so many competing agendas around the table, not all premiers are going to get "everything they want."

"But there's opportunity, there's a lot to do in Canada," he said. "A lot of these projects, they might not start on day one, maybe they're going to start down the road."

The first ministers are also expected to discuss breaking down interprovincial trade barriers, which would make it easier to purchase Canadian-made goods from other provinces and territories.

Many provinces, including Quebec and Ontario, are coming to the table with legislation that would eliminate some of these longstanding obstacles to internal trade.

Reporters and TV cameras were allowed into the meeting room to watch opening remarks Monday.

Ford walked into the room chatting with Smith and then told reporters that “love is in the air” just before the premiers gathered for the roundtable.

Internal Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland and Carney’s outgoing chief of staff Marco Mendicino shook hands with Moe on the margins of the room just before the meeting’s start.

Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc took a seat at the table with the premiers next to Holt, while Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson sat at another table at the very back of the room near Mendicino and Freeland.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards

MORE National ARTICLES

Some nurse practitioners in Canada not being paid for administering MAID

Some nurse practitioners in Canada not being paid for administering MAID
She has a full-time nursing job and a side gig offering virtual care, and in the evenings and on weekends, assesses patients for medical assistance in dying — known as MAID — and delivers the procedure. Like many provinces, Ontario does not have a mechanism for nurse practitioners to take on independent work and be paid for it, like a fee-for-service structure often in place for doctors.  

Some nurse practitioners in Canada not being paid for administering MAID

No word on status of 135 Canadians cleared to leave Gaza Strip over weekend

No word on status of 135 Canadians cleared to leave Gaza Strip over weekend
Meanwhile, Canadians with loved ones trapped in Gaza are still waiting to learn whether anyone connected to Canada was able to make the journey into Egypt via the Rafah land crossing over the weekend.

No word on status of 135 Canadians cleared to leave Gaza Strip over weekend

Strong winds over Vancouver Island, with freezing rain in B.C.'s southern Interior

Strong winds over Vancouver Island, with freezing rain in B.C.'s southern Interior
Environment Canada is warning of strong winds in Victoria and along the west coast of Vancouver Island, while southeastern B.C. could see freezing rain. The weather office says winds blowing 80 kilometres an hour with gusts up to 100 are forecast to persist on parts of the island until some time Sunday morning.  

Strong winds over Vancouver Island, with freezing rain in B.C.'s southern Interior

No injuries after train collision, derailment south of Vancouver, B.C. company says

No injuries after train collision, derailment south of Vancouver, B.C. company says
Canada's Transportation Safety Board says it is sending an investigator to probe a train collision and derailment in Metro Vancouver, while a spokesperson for the company says no one was injured and there's no threat to the public. A statement from the board says the incident involved two trains operated by Texas-headquartered BNSF Railway at a subdivision in New Westminster, B.C.

No injuries after train collision, derailment south of Vancouver, B.C. company says

Police watchdog called to investigate man's death in Dawson Creek

Police watchdog called to investigate man's death in Dawson Creek
Mounties in northeastern British Columbia say one man is dead after exchanging gunfire with police and barricading himself inside an apartment overnight. Officers found the man dead of what the RCMP say are believed to have been self-inflicted injuries the next morning, and B.C.'s police watchdog has been notified.

Police watchdog called to investigate man's death in Dawson Creek

Feds announce funding for rental homes in BC

Feds announce funding for rental homes in BC
The federal government is providing more than 155-million dollars for rental homes in five B-C cities in the Okanagan and on Vancouver Island. Statements from the Ministry of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities says nearly 88-million in fully-repayable low-interest loans is earmarked for the construction of 271 rental units in Victoria, Langford and Courtenay.  

Feds announce funding for rental homes in BC