Premier David Eby says he has spoken to Prime Minister Mark Carney about a memorandum of understanding being negotiated between Alberta and the federal government relating to a northern B.C. oil pipeline.
“He has outlined to me that the agreement with Alberta is not finalized yet,” Eby said. “And I took the opportunity of our conversation to outline British Columbia’s perspective.”
A pipeline would require the lifting of a ban on heavy oil tankers docking on B.C.’s north coast. Area First Nations oppose rescinding this ban or introducing exemptions.
Eby said he told Carney his three main concerns: That he thinks First Nations need to have a say in a pipeline impacting their traditional territory, that any massive multi-billion-dollar subsidy for a project that benefits Alberta ought to be matched by a similar subsidy for a B.C. project, and that the dangers of transporting oil through north coast water must be accounted for.
“At a minimum, coastal First Nations and British Columbia need to be at the table for these conversations about our province,” Eby said.
There is also no project proposal or proponent, something Eby has pointed out regularly for several months as talk of a new pipeline has heated up.
More to come.