
Prince Rupert mayor sides with Eby over Smith on Northern Gateway pipeline reboot
OTTAWA — The mayor of northern British Columbia's busiest port city says he's following Premier David Eby's lead in taking a wait-and-see approach to rebooting the cancelled Northern Gateway Pipeline project.
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Prince Rupert Mayor Herb Pond told the National Post on Friday that he's reserving judgment until he sees a new proposal on the table.
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'I'm a little bit (more) with Premier Eby… Until there's a project and a proponent, we're not going to spend much time on it,' said Pond.
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'It's so hard to have a discussion about an imaginary project.'
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Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has pushed heavily for a revival of the shelved pipeline, which would have shipped up to 525,000 barrels of Alberta oil per day through nearby Kitimat, B.C., and ultimately to markets in the Asia-Pacific region via tanker.
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Smith has said that the revamped North Coast pipeline should end at the Port of Prince Rupert, citing its close proximity to potential buyers in markets like Japan and South Korea.
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She's also said that shipping Alberta oil through northern B.C. is one of the best things Canada can do to reduce its economic dependency on top trading partner the United States.
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But Eby says that Smith is getting ahead of herself with no entity, public or private, coming forward to lead the project.
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'There's no proponent, there's no money, there's no project right now,' Eby said this week during a trade visit Seoul, South Korea.
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Pond says he agrees with Smith that Prince Rupert is the most logical destination for a new pipeline carrying Alberta oil to the Pacific Ocean.
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'If (technical dimensions) were the only thing you were scoring it on… Rupert would score the highest,' said Pond.
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'Prince Rupert is a very deep natural harbour, doesn't need to be dredged (and) we're not moving through a congested traffic area (like) Vancouver.'
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But he added that a new oil pipeline wouldn't make or break Prince Rupert economically, and may not be worth the risk of an oil spill in the sensitive marine ecosystem.

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Calgary Herald
8 hours ago
- Calgary Herald
Telus strikes back at Cogeco and defends Joly's decision to uphold CRTC's wholesale internet rules
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Vancouver Sun
3 days ago
- Vancouver Sun
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The Montreal-based company is not thrilled with the new minister's first consequential move. So much so that he wanted to 'ring the alarm bell' because he never thought that 'such a damaging, dangerous decision' as the one she made last week 'would or could be made.' 'We had high hopes that this new government would make better decisions for business and the Canadian economy,' Perron said. 'And what we saw last week, by the minister's decision, is more reminiscent of old Trudeau era, superficial policies.' Within the industry, Mélanie Joly was expected to announce her rebuttal of a controversial decision by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) that allows, for example, a company like Telus, which is strong in Western Canada, to use other providers' networks to attract thousands of customers in Ontario and Quebec instead of building its own infrastructure. The regulator said the measure was intended to reduce costs for consumers. 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Vancouver Sun
3 days ago
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