Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Trans Mountain reaches 'key milestone' as pipeline construction begins in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2020 07:37 PM
  • Trans Mountain reaches 'key milestone' as pipeline construction begins in B.C.

Trans Mountain says it has reached another "key milestone" in the project to triple capacity of a pipeline moving oil from the Edmonton area to port in Burnaby, B.C.

A statement says construction on a seven-kilometre section of the line has begun in Kamloops.

It says a crew of up to 50 is preparing the area, but the workforce will grow to about 600 during peak construction later this summer or early fall.

The federal Crown corporation says completion of the Kamloops section of pipeline is expected in about seven months.

Kamloops is part of Trans Mountain's Interior construction area that is to see 185-kilometres of pipe laid from just north of the city to the summit of the Coquihalla Highway.

Trans Mountain delivers about 300,000 barrels of petroleum products daily, but expansion is expected to boost that to 890,000 barrels and increase the number of tankers through Vancouver's harbour to more than one a day.

"It is good news for workers in the region and an important step forward on the path to building this critical piece of infrastructure," Ian Anderson, president and CEO of Trans Mountain, says in the statement.

Construction spending in the Kamloops area is expected to be more than $450 million over the next two years, with additional workforce spending of more than $40 million.

Pipe installation began in Alberta late last year and the first section of pipe, near Edmonton, is 60 per cent complete, the company said last month.

The estimated cost of completing the entire expansion project was originally estimated at $7.4 billion, but Anderson said in February the budget had grown to $12.6 billion.

MORE National ARTICLES

Manitoba Government Changes Course, Plans To Adopt Its Own Carbon Tax

WINNIPEG - Manitoba's Progressive Conservative government has changed course and has agreed to bring in its own carbon tax, but is cutting the provincial sales tax as well.    

Manitoba Government Changes Course, Plans To Adopt Its Own Carbon Tax

PM Justin Trudeau Warns Against 'Knee-Jerk' Reactions To COVID-19

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says knee-jerk reactions to the novel coronavirus will not keep people safe, as he defended Canada's decision not to close its borders to foreign nationals coming from regions where the outbreak is spreading.    

PM Justin Trudeau Warns Against 'Knee-Jerk' Reactions To COVID-19

Quebec Officials Say Man Presumed To Have Coronavirus Travelled To India

MONTREAL - Quebec public health officials say the province's second presumptive case of the new coronavirus involves a traveller returning to the province from India.

Quebec Officials Say Man Presumed To Have Coronavirus Travelled To India

Yukon Adopts Permanent Daylight Time As Consultation Wins Overwhelming Support

Yukon Adopts Permanent Daylight Time As Consultation Wins Overwhelming Support
WHITEHORSE - Once Yukon residents spring their clocks forward this weekend, there will be no turning back.

Yukon Adopts Permanent Daylight Time As Consultation Wins Overwhelming Support

Without Indigenous Consent For Pipelines, Expect More Confrontations

Canadians can expect more disruptive protests if the federal government pushes forward with the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion against the wishes of some of the Indigenous communities it will pass through, says a British Columbia lawyer and Indigenous negotiator.

Without Indigenous Consent For Pipelines, Expect More Confrontations

Horgan Says Pipeline Protests At B.c. Legislature 'Counterproductive'

B.C. Premier John Horgan questions what is being achieved by ongoing protests at the legislature, but he won't ask dozens of people camped at the building's ceremonial gates to leave.

Horgan Says Pipeline Protests At B.c. Legislature 'Counterproductive'