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91原创 pro- and anti-pipeline advocates oppose Ottawa purchase

Tuesday鈥檚 surprise announcement won鈥檛 end protests.
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91原创鈥檚 Tamara Jensen played host to the Suits and Boots Rally on May 26 at her Milner property. (Heather Colpitts/91原创 Advance)

The Canadian government buying Kinder Morgan鈥檚 core Canadian assets, including the existing pipeline through North 91原创, won鈥檛 stop opposition.

Opponent Brandon Gabriel, a Kwantlen First Nation member, said the $4.5 billion purchase comes as no surprise.

鈥淚t comes as no surprise that Kinder Morgan is bailing out on their own project and is saddling their debt burden on the taxpayers of Canada, and both the federal government and the Alberta government have no choice but to clamp down and bite on a deal that is still facing 15 supreme court challenges, $2 billion in debt, and no end in sight for delays,鈥 he commented.

The deal actually confirms what many opponents believe, he noted.

鈥淭his is looking like panic from the prime minister of Canada, and a welcome sign to the opponents of this dubious project,鈥 Gabriel said.

Kinder Morgan had set a May 31 deadline for deciding whether to pull out of the proposed pipeline (TMEP) because of delays, opposition and court challenges.

Tamara Jansen, the local businesswoman who organized a pro-resource rally that was held May 26 in Milner, is also not a fan of the government buying the pipeline.

鈥淚 would say that today [Tuesday] marks the moment our country becomes 鈥楥anazuela鈥,鈥 Janzen commented, making a comparison to Venezuela which nationalized its energy sector in the 1970s. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a scary thing when the deep pockets of the government compete against private enterprise. Nobody wins in that scenario.鈥

The deal includes the existing pipeline built in the 1950s.

The price is $4.5 billion Canadian and the deal includes the federal government and KM looking for a third-party buyer before a July 22 deadline.

The sale requires that the pipeline expansion project continue and is subject to approval by KM shareholders and regulators. That鈥檚 expected to drive the cost to at least $12 billion.

KM keeps control over its oil tank storage facilities in Alberta, the Vancouver Wharves Terminal, and its pipeline from the U.S. to Fort Saskatchewan, Alta.

鈥淲ell, let鈥檚 be honest, the federal and Alberta governments have basically been acting as middle-managers on behalf of this foreign oil company right from the outset and will continue to do so,鈥 Gabriel said. 鈥淪o the playing field has not changed all that much.鈥

There will continue to be opposition by the Kwantlen, other indigenous people and non-indigenous opponents, he noted.

鈥淲e are still planning on asserting our Indigenous rights and title to these unceded lands, and that assertion has been conspicuously left out of the conversations taking place at the government levels, in the media, and on the streets in our communities,鈥 Gabriel said.

The deal isn鈥檛 good fiscally, he added.

鈥淭he financial bailout by the federal government will ultimately lead to more financial losses paid from taxpayers who will now be faced with paying off the debt incurred by an American oil company. From a business perspective it makes no sense.

鈥淔rom a political perspective the Trudeau government is just trying to save face and elimination from their seat of power in the coming election down the road, and the Notley government is in a tough spot as well. Both governments are trying to appear like they are in control of the situation, but they keep digging themselves further into untenable political turmoil.鈥



Heather Colpitts

About the Author: Heather Colpitts

Since starting in the news industry in 1992, my passion for sharing stories has taken me around Western Canada.
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