Pro-pipeline First Nations spar with environmental activists over 'devastating' tanker ban bill - Action News
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Pro-pipeline First Nations spar with environmental activists over 'devastating' tanker ban bill

First Nations chiefs and leaders who say they represent over 200 Indigenous communities in B.C. and Alberta are fighting back against the federal government's plan to ban all oil tanker traffic off the coast of northern B.C. calling it an "attack" on the energy industry that will leave remote First Nations destitute.

Pipeline backer claims competing First Nations group is funded by U.S.-based green lobby

Eagle Spirit Pipeline President Calvin Helin is seen during a news conference in Ottawa, Tuesday December 11, 2018. Helin wants the Senate to kill Bill C-48, which would ban oil tankers from the northern B.C. coast. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

First Nations chiefs and leaders who say they represent over 200 Indigenous communities in B.C. and Alberta are fighting back against the federal government's plan to ban all oil tanker traffic off the coast of northern B.C.,calling it an "attack" on the energy industry that will impoverish remote First Nations.

Chief Roy Jones Jr. of the National Coalition of Chiefs, a group that supports energy projectsas a solution to rampant poverty on First Nations reserves, said the federal Liberal government is "arbitrarily denying Indigenous communities ... investments" by curtailingdevelopment through the northern reaches of the province.

"We're trying to lessen our dependency on federal [welfare] dollars. Bill C-48 will just set us back," Jones said.

Calvin Helin,a member of the LaxKw'alaamsFirst Nation near Prince Rupert, B.C. andan executive with the Eagle Spirit pipeline project,said "elites" from Central Canadaareignoring the pleas of pro-pipeline Indigenous communitieswho see this sort of developmentas a solution tounemployment rates as high as80 per cent, and living standards on a par with sub-Saharan Africa.

Watch Helin discuss the impact of the tanker bill on Power & Politics

Calvin Helin on tanker ban bill's impact on energy projects

6 years ago
Duration 6:03
The Eagle Spirit Energy chairman discusses the impact C-48 would have on his proposed pipeline project.

"There's no question the energy industry will becompletely savaged," Helin said. "Canada has become the laughing stock of the energy world."

Helin said Ottawa brought about this proposed oil tanker ban in part because it is kowtowing to self-described anti-pipeline "leaders" who are "on the payroll of environmental groups."

"Unfortunately, because there's literally no employment in our community, that's how some people remain employed," Helin said, referring to individualshe claims are falsely presenting themselves as First Nations leaders to politicians andthe media to advocate against natural resources development.

Helin said the Nine Tribes of Lax Kw'alaams has sent a cease-and-desist letter to Gary Reece, a former community leader who claims to be a hereditary chief,to stop presenting himself as the voice of the Lax Kw'alaams on energy issues.

Helin accused Reece and others like him of being "absolutely" influenced by U.S.-based environmentalist organizations that are bankrolling anti-oil campaigns, calling them "puppets and props" for the green lobby.

Reecemet with senators last week urging them to pass Bill C-48, the legislation that will prohibit tankers carrying crude oil from loading or unloading at ports in northern B.C.

"The chiefs feel that there is foreign interference in their traditional territories, territories they know better than anybody else,"Helinsaid.

The House of Commons has passed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's promised bill banning oil tanker traffic along a stretch of the northern B.C. coast. It is now before the Senate. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

MarilynSlettisthe chief of theHeiltsukNation and, with Reese,a member of the delegation that travelled to Ottawa last week to talk with senators. ShetoldCBC News Tuesday that her group, Coastal First Nations, does receive funding from environmental groups but it's just one of a "multitude" offunding sources they rely on to carry out their advocacy work.

Slettsaid the financial support doesn't mean her First Nations coalition isbeholden to environmentalists or "one-sided," as Helin suggested.

"Our agenda is not just the green agenda. Our agenda has always been the stewardship of our territories and the protection of whatever we have here, and we do it in a sustainable way," Slett said. "Our concern about tanker traffic goes back to the 1970s. We've been facing these same questions for decades."

The bill in question wouldban tankers capable of carrying more than 12,500 metric tons of oil from an area that stretches from the northern tip of Vancouver Island to the Alaska border. The legislation formalizesa similar, voluntary ban that has been in place in the region for the last 20 years.

Eagle Spirit claims '100 per cent' support from local chiefs

The bill would block Helin'squest to build Eagle Spirit, a $16-billion pipeline project to carrymedium and heavy crude from FortMcMurray to the Grassy Point port near Prince Rupert, B.C.

Helin has pitched the project as an alternative to the now-defunct Northern Gateway project which was cancelled by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet and the long-delayed Trans Mountain expansion project. Helin has the support of 35 First Nations in the area, including every chief along the proposed pipeline's route.

Tanker ban supporterssay they worry that a spill of a crude oil product in coastal waters could threaten the viability of a diverse fishing industry that sustains well over 1,000 jobs in the area, from the fishermen themselves to processing plants along the region's shores.

The proposed route for the Eagle Spirit Energy Pipeline would run about 1,562 kilometres from Fort McMurray to a terminal at either Grassy Point, B.C. or Hyder, Alaska. (Eagle Spirit Energy)

However, theelected mayor of the Lax Kw'alaams Band John Helin, the brother of Calvin has filed a legal challenge against Canada and B.C., hoping to get a court to rule that the tanker moratorium infringes on Indigenous and treaty rights by blocking a plan to build an export port on their territory.

The band asserts it was not adequately consulted or accommodated by the federal government ahead of the introduction of Bill C-48in Parliament.

Transport Minister Marc Garneau, who introduced the legislation in the Commons, has met withrepresentatives fromthe LaxKw'alaamsBand.

"Since January 2016, our government has held close to 75 engagement sessions, bilateraland multilateral meetings with Indigenous groups, industry stakeholders and communities across Canada on the moratorium and improving marine safety," a spokesperson for the minister said.

"We are committed to ensuring that we protect this incredible environment that coastal and Indigenous communities call home, and ensure clean water for our kids and grandkids. At the same time, we remain fully committed to supporting our energy sector by expanding pipeline capacity to new markets."

The pro-pipeline group of chiefs said Tuesday they are prepared to file a formal complaint against Canada before the United Nations over an alleged breach of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), which asserts Indigenous groups have "the right to the lands, territories and resources which they have traditionally owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired."

A competing group the Allied Tribes of Lax Kw'alaams, whichcounts hereditary leaders among its members also claims to represent the "true owners" of the land in question and said Helin and his allies have hijacked the original intent of UNDRIP.

"The federal oil tanker ban is in line with their stewardship obligations to protect the land and waters for future generations from oil spills," the group said.

The question of who can legitimately claim to speakfor these northern, coastal First Nations on development issueshas long been politically fraught.

The Federal Court of Appealruled on a similar matter earlier this year,siding with the elected Indigenous leaders over leaders who claim status because of family lineage or inherited titles as the legitimate representatives oftheir communities.

For example, in February 2018, the courtdismissed a request for a judicial review fromDonnie Wesley,a self-describedhereditary tribal leader with the LaxKw'alaamsFirst Nation, onthe PacificNorthWestLNGproject.

Justice Robert Barnes saidWesley had failed to prove that he is the head chief of theGitwilgyootstribe,one of nine allied tribes of the LaxKw'alaamsFirst Nation.

'Devastating'

Supporters of Alberta'soilsandsfear the ban, when combined with scarce pipeline capacity andcratering oil prices, could spell the end of one of the country's largest export industries. During her swing through Ottawa last week, Alberta Premier RachelNotleysaidthe bill should be tossed "into the dustbin."

Chief IsaacLaboucan-Avirom of the WoodlandCreeFirst Nation in Alberta, which has considerable interests in the oilsands, said Tuesday the tanker ban would be "devastating."

"Without economic resources, we are all in jeopardy. So many jobs are being lost," he said.

Bill C-48 was passed by the House of Commons last spring. The bill passed the second reading legislative phase in the Senate Tuesday and will now be sent to committee for further study.

A number of senators have expressed fears that the bill would kill off an international shipping route for Canada's energy products at a time of constrained pipeline capacity.

"Without the Trans Mountain pipeline and with the tanker moratorium, there is absolutely no possibility for Alberta to get its product to tidewater. We will have closed the gate and made any alternative solution, if Trans Mountain fails, impossible," Conservative Alberta Sen. Scott Tannas saidin a recent speech in the chamber.