First Nations in Quebec, Ontario to study impact of Gazoduq pipeline on their territories - Action News
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First Nations in Quebec, Ontario to study impact of Gazoduq pipeline on their territories

Eight First Nations communities along a proposed pipeline route through Quebec will work together to submit their recommendations on the proposed Gazoduq pipeline.

But working agreement with company does not equate to consent

A port overlooks the water.
The proposed pipeline would carry natural gas to the Port of Saguenay where a proposed LNG plant and marine terminal would be built near this existing wharf. (Julia Page/CBC)

Eight communities from three First Nations in Quebec and Ontario have signed a working agreement with GazoduqInc., the company behind a proposed 780-kilometre natural gas pipeline, to analyze the impacts of the project on their territories.

The collaboration does not, however, "in any way" mean the communities have given their consent, said Adam Jourdain, the president of the collaborative entity named Mamo Aki.

Thecommunities are located in Quebec's Abitibi, Mauricie and Saguenay regions, as well as Northern Ontario, all places the pipeline would run through if it is approved.

The Wahgoshig First Nation, Abitibiwinni First Nation, Lac-Simon Anishnabe First Nation, Atikamew of Opitciwan, Atikamekw of Wemotaci, Pekuakamiulnuatsh First Nation, Essipit First Nation and Pessamit First Nation will now be represented under Mamo Aki.

Jourdain, who is alsothe director of economic development for Wemotaci, saidbeing able to speak asone united front will ensure communities have the same information and a stronger voice as the project moves forward.

Normally, he said, companies would have to go door-to-door and sign separate agreements with each community.

"Now we are all at the same table and we have the same information we'll be able to put more pressure," he said.

Each community will still decide on their own whether or not they support the pipeline in the long run.

But the budget allocated by Gazoduqto Mamo Aki will allow the hiring of independent environmentaland legal experts.

"It serves as a lever to help us make a free and informed decision at the end of this process," Jourdain told CBCNews.

Louis Bergeron, the president of Gazoduq, said the company has been working to reach this kind of agreementfor the pasttwo years.

"It makes it more efficient to have these eight communities working on the same page and having one co-ordinated approach with Gazoduq," Bergeron said.

Critical timing

The company hopes to carry natural gas to a liquefaction terminal on the Saguenay River, a sister project being pushed by GNL Quebec.

Both GNL Quebec and Gazoduqrecently found out that one of the main investors in their $14-billion endeavour was pulling out, leaving a $4-billion gap.

Gazoduq said it continues to move forward with the project, and said a final decision on the investment plan will be made in 2021.

The pipeline extension, in yellow, would begin near the Ontario border and cross the Abitibi and upper Mauricie regions, ending at the Port of Saguenay. (Joan Dymianiw/CBC)

The Impact Assessment Agency of Canada (IAAC) is currently reviewing Gazoduq'sinitial project description.

The company also intends to submit to Quebec's environmental review board, known by its French acronym BAPE, in 2020.

Bergeron said that when they do, they will already have the input they need from First Nations.

"They will themselves conduct some specific studies regarding the environment and traditional activities on their own territories," said Bergeron.

By includingFirst Nations early on in the process, Bergeron hopes Gazoduqwill be able to give a more complete portrait of the project to the BAPE.

"We'll be in a position to talk about remediation and I would say mitigation, and how we can better deal with the issues, the specificities of their territoriesand their traditional activities."

Company remains unphased despite protests

In recent weeks, both Innu and Anishnabecommunities in Quebec have protested in solidarity with the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefsand the construction of anatural gas pipeline in northern British Columbia.

The protests didn't block traffic or cause any major disruptions,but showed some local opposition to the Gazoduq pipeline.

Innu groups around Saguenay have expressed concerns over the pipeline that would run across their ancestral territory. (Priscilla Plamondon Lalancette/Radio-Canada)

The company said even though it will be dealing with one centralized group from now on,it will be able to address divisions within the communities thanks to the studies they will submit to the company.

"They will collaborate to the filing of the application,meaning that all their concerns and preoccupations will have been taken into account," said Bergeron.