Friday, December 5, 2025
ADVT 
National

Premier Eby tells Carney it's unacceptable B.C. has been cut out of pipeline talks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Nov, 2025 11:59 AM
  • Premier Eby tells Carney it's unacceptable B.C. has been cut out of pipeline talks

For a project he says "doesn't actually exist," there was a lot British Columbia Premier David Eby had to say about a potential pipeline from Alberta to B.C.'s northern coast, in a phone call with Prime Minister Mark Carney on Monday.

There should be a ban on public spending on the project, he said. Or a cap. Or, if it goes ahead with taxpayer money, then B.C. should also get a "$50-billion federally funded project."

Eby also said he told Carney "how unacceptable" it was for Alberta and Saskatchewan to talk with the federal government about the proposal without input from his province.

"This is not something that would happen to Quebec," Eby said Monday at an unrelated news conference in Victoria.

"This is not something that would happen to other provinces in the federation. I don't know why the thought was, that it would be okay for it to happen to British Columbia."

The federal government and Alberta are said to be finalizing a memorandum of understanding that could include a pipeline, along with exceptions to the ban of tankers off the B.C. coast. 

Eby declined to say what steps his government would take to stop such a pipeline, which he has said could threaten thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in "real projects" that depend on a "fragile consensus" with First Nations. 

But he said he expects B.C. to fully participate in the conversations, as well as Coastal First Nations, whose consent and support is required.

"We don't have to agree, but it is absolutely crucial that the perspective, knowledge and relationships of British Columbia are leveraged at that table to make sure that we reach the best conclusion for the people of Canada possible." 

Eby said he was "not threatened by a project that doesn't actually exist," and the "entire proposal from (Alberta) Premier (Danielle) Smith is a communications exercise. There is no company. There is no money. There is no route. There's no nothing." 

Asked about Eby's complaint about being cut out of talks, Federal Energy Minister Tim Hodgson said Monday that the federal government will be talking to B.C. "in short order." 

Hodgson said the province is the "beneficiary" of having more projects than anywhere else on Ottawa's list of major projects under consideration for fast-tracking.

Asked if he thought this represented an attempt by Ottawa to soften the blow of a future pipeline, Eby demurred.

"I will let the prime minister speak about the agreement," Eby said. "The one piece that he underlined for me was that the agreement was not yet finalized at this point, and my expectation, my hope, is that B.C.'s feedback is incorporated into any final agreement, and particularly, B.C.'s participation going forward, and respect for the role of coastal First Nations." 

Eby questioned whether the economics of a pipeline made sense, given the current price of oil. He said he did not foresee any private company paying for the project. 

"The reason for their silence is that they are not interested, just like they are not interested in buying the pipeline that we already have that taxpayers own," Eby said, referring to the Trans Mountain pipeline 

Eby said he also told Carney Ottawa should impose a cap on any public funding for the project.

"Or there should be a prohibition on taxpayer dollars invested in this project, or if it is going to be taxpayer-funded, that British Columbia should get access to a $50-billion, federally funded project as well." 

The Hecate Strait between Haida Gwaii and the mainland of British Columbia is an "incredibly precarious" shipping route, Eby said he told Carney. 

"It's the reason why the ban on oil tankers has existed for generations across multiple administrations of different political stripes in Canada, and in British Columbia." 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Post submits overhaul plan to the federal government

Canada Post submits overhaul plan to the federal government
Canada Post says it has submitted a plan to the federal government to transform its struggling business model into a financially sustainable postal service.

Canada Post submits overhaul plan to the federal government

System brings heavy rain, warm weather to B.C. as temperature records fall

System brings heavy rain, warm weather to B.C. as temperature records fall
A weekend weather system in British Columbia brought record rain to some communities while others saw unseasonably high temperatures.

System brings heavy rain, warm weather to B.C. as temperature records fall

Anand says U.S. secretary Rubio has avoided '51st state' chatter as G7 meeting looms

Anand says U.S. secretary Rubio has avoided '51st state' chatter as G7 meeting looms
Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio hasn't repeated President Donald Trump's musings about making Canada the 51st state during their conversations.

Anand says U.S. secretary Rubio has avoided '51st state' chatter as G7 meeting looms

US flight cancellations expected to drag on even after the government shutdown ends

US flight cancellations expected to drag on even after the government shutdown ends
The flight cancellations at airports across the U.S. are expected to persist even after the government shutdown ends. 

US flight cancellations expected to drag on even after the government shutdown ends

Poilievre lays out market-first opposition to Carney's federal budget in speech

Poilievre lays out market-first opposition to Carney's federal budget in speech
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre needled Prime Minister Mark Carney over the size of the federal deficit Friday in a speech offering his critique of the Liberal budget tabled on Nov. 4.

Poilievre lays out market-first opposition to Carney's federal budget in speech

Liberal government survives second confidence vote amid Conservative caucus turmoil

Liberal government survives second confidence vote amid Conservative caucus turmoil
The Conservatives helped the minority Liberal government survive a second confidence vote on the budget this afternoon.

Liberal government survives second confidence vote amid Conservative caucus turmoil