Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

First Nations' Challenges Of Northern Gateway Pipeline To Be Heard In Court

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Oct, 2015 10:19 AM
    VANCOUVER — Multiple legal challenges aimed at overturning the federal government's approval of the Enbridge (TSX:ENB) Northern Gateway pipeline will be heard starting Thursday.
     
    The challenges are expected to bring new scrutiny to the government's environmental approval process and its responsibility to consult with aboriginal groups.
     
    Eight First Nations, four environmental groups and one labour union launched the legal actions, which will be heard at the Federal Court of Appeal over six days in Vancouver.
     
    Their arguments include that the federal panel that reviewed the project didn't adequately consider threats to wildlife and oceans and excluded key issues of concern to First Nations.
     
    "There was no consultation," said Terry Teegee, a tribal chief with the Carrier Sekani Tribal Council, which represents two communities that have filed litigation.
     
    "We didn't participate in the Joint Review Panel process because it didn't address the issues that we wanted, in terms of the cumulative impacts of the project as well as our title and rights."
     
    The government accepted the panel's recommendations and in June 2014 approved the $7-billion project that would carry bitumen from Alberta's oilsands to British Columbia's coast. There were 209 conditions attached to the acceptance.
     
    Canada's Attorney General, Northern Gateway Pipelines L Partnership and the National Energy Board are named as respondents to the challenges.
     
    Three organizations — Amnesty International, the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers and British Columbia's Attorney General — will make arguments as interveners.
     
    The federal government declined to comment ahead of the hearings.
     
    Speaking for Northern Gateway, Ivan Giesbrecht said the company recognizes traditional aboriginal land use rights and believes First Nations should share in ownership and benefits.
     
    "Our ongoing priority is to continue to build trust, engage in respectful dialogues and build meaningful partnerships with First Nations and Metis communities," he said.
     
    "We know we have more work to do in this regard and we are committed to doing this work."
     
    Giesbrecht said the Joint Review Panel's examination of the Northern Gateway project was among the most exhaustive in Canadian history, spanning 180 days of hearings.
     
    But Karen Wristen of the Living Oceans Society, among the groups that filed challenges, said the panel appeared to ignore crucial evidence submitted by interveners.
     
    Her organization's evidence indicated spilled bitumen would sink beneath the ocean's surface, making it impossible to recover using conventional technology. The panel's report, however, found the environment would recover within months or years — a conclusion that Wristen said there's no evidence to support.
     
    She said she hopes the hearings draw attention to Canada's "suffering" environmental assessment process.
     
    "I think environmental assessment in this country is in deep, deep trouble at the moment," she said. "It's not providing the kind of in-depth scientific review that the government would have us believe it is."
     
    Pete Erickson, a hereditary chief with the Nak'azdli First Nation, said Enbridge was given days to present its case to the panel while he got 10 minutes to speak for his people.
     
    He said a 2014 Supreme Court decision that gave land title to the Tsilhqot'in sets a precedent that requires the government to not only consult with First Nations, but seek their approval.
     
    "We've said that under no circumstances is the pipeline ever going to be allowed in the current presentation," he said. "We've decided that there's no way we can allow it and I believe that the court will recognize that we have the right to say that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    UBC Faculty Call On Chairman To Resign Over Academic Dispute

    UBC Faculty Call On Chairman To Resign Over Academic Dispute
    Board of governors chairman John Montalbano came under fire from the faculty association and Prof. Jennifer Berdahl after UBC's president quit in early August.

    UBC Faculty Call On Chairman To Resign Over Academic Dispute

    BC Hydro Lawyer Says Stop-work Order Would Cause Expensive Delays On Site C Dam

    BC Hydro Lawyer Says Stop-work Order Would Cause Expensive Delays On Site C Dam
    VANCOUVER — A stop-work order for the Site C dam will cause "extreme prejudice" to BC Hydro at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars and a one-year delay in the construction schedule, the utility's lawyer says.

    BC Hydro Lawyer Says Stop-work Order Would Cause Expensive Delays On Site C Dam

    5 More People Sickened In Connection With Raw B.C. Shellfish

    5 More People Sickened In Connection With Raw B.C. Shellfish
    The Public Health Agency of Canada says 53 people have been sickened in B.C. and another 19 in neighbouring Alberta since June 1.

    5 More People Sickened In Connection With Raw B.C. Shellfish

    Mayor Lauds Economic Spinoff From New $40-Million Cascades Casino In Kamloops

    Mayor Lauds Economic Spinoff From New $40-Million Cascades Casino In Kamloops
    Cascades Casino Kamloops opened the doors to its new $40 million, 5,800-square-metre entertainment centre on Wednesday night in the same city that's home to the B.C. Lottery Corporation's head office.

    Mayor Lauds Economic Spinoff From New $40-Million Cascades Casino In Kamloops

    U.S. Couple Whose Baby Was Locked In Niagara Falls, Ont. Hotel Safe Contacts Police

    U.S. Couple Whose Baby Was Locked In Niagara Falls, Ont. Hotel Safe Contacts Police
    Police say a baby who found locked inside a Niagara Falls, Ont., hotel safe and freed by a maintenance worker this week have concluded the incident was an accident and there are no concerns for the child’s safety.

    U.S. Couple Whose Baby Was Locked In Niagara Falls, Ont. Hotel Safe Contacts Police

    Ontario Appeal Court Upholds 'Toronto 18' Terror Plot Conviction

    Ontario Appeal Court Upholds 'Toronto 18' Terror Plot Conviction
    Asad Ansari had appealed the guilty verdict delivered by a jury in June 2010 on the grounds that the trial judge admitted improper evidence

    Ontario Appeal Court Upholds 'Toronto 18' Terror Plot Conviction