Did Trudeau make the right decision on the oil pipelines? | CBC Radio - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:23 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Cross Country CheckupUpdated

Did Trudeau make the right decision on the oil pipelines?

The Trudeau government gives the 'go ahead' to two controversial pipelines, and kills another. Opponents say they'll fight to the end to kill the first two. Did Trudeau get it right?
A ship receives its load of oil from the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Westridge loading dock in Burnaby, B.C. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press) (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

The Trudeau government gives the 'go ahead' to two controversial pipelines, and kills another. Opponents say they'll fight to the end to kill the first two. Did Trudeau get it right?

More from this episode:

GUESTS | LIVE CHAT | LINKS & ARTICLES | SHORT PODCAST

Every month,five massive tankers lumber through Vancouver harbour,carrying diluted bitumen from Alberta's oil sandspiped through Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain line. The Texas-based company aims to triple the capacity of that pipelineand that would mean a lot more oil tankers in Vancouver.

This week, Kinder Morgan got a step closer to it's $7 billion projectthanks to Justin Trudeau. The federal government greenlighted two pipelines:the Trans Mountain lineand Enbridge's Line 3. At the same time,the government drove the final nail into the coffin of the Northern Gateway project, and declared a moratorium on oil tanker traffic off B.C.'s northern coast.

It was a defining moment for Prime Minister Trudeau. He'd already laid the groundwork... bolstering marine safety on the West Coast and pushing a climate deal with the provinces that includes carbon pricing. Now,the prime minister says pipeline approval is in the national interest... that it balances his commitments to grow the economy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Praise from Alberta was swift. Not so in BC, where "pipeline" is often a dirty word and social license is hard to come by. Local mayors objected fiercely... environmentalists and Indigenous groups promise civil disobediance and lawsuits... and this is bound to be an election issue in B.C. next year.

Our question: Did Justin Trudeau make the right decision on the oil pipelines?

Guests

Derek Corrigan, Mayor of Burnaby
Twitter: @CityofBurnaby

Grand Chief Stewart Phillip,President of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs
Twitter: @UBCIC

Deborah Yedlin, Business Columnist Calgary Herald
Twitter: @ddyedlin

David Detomasi, Professor of International Business at Queen's University
Twitter: @DavidDetomasi

Links & Articles

CBC.ca

National Post

Globe and Mail

Macleans