Few hurdles remain for Trans Mountain pipeline expansion
A Federal Court of Appeal ruling Tuesday removes one of the last active court hurdles to completion of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
The court decision means construction, which is already underway, can continue, although the First Nations whose case was dismissed have 60 days to appeal to the Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, last week, the Canada Energy Regulator restarted hearings to determine detailed routing on contested portions of the Trans Mountain route from Edmonton to Burnaby, B.C.
Landowners, Indigenous groups and other stakeholders are able to object to the route proposed by Trans Mountain, with hearings granted where material changes were identified since 2018, or where hearings had been granted but not completed prior to the court decision that halted the project in 2018.
The 1,147-kilometre pipeline project was re-approved by the federal government last June.
About 68 per cent of the pipeline’s detailed route has been approved. A full hearing schedule is expected to be announced shortly.
Pipeline construction is underway in Alberta, as well as at the Edmonton and Burnaby terminals, and the Westridge Marine Terminal.
The original Trans Mountain pipeline was built in 1953. The expansion follows a similar route and will boost system capacity from about 300,000 barrels per day to 890,000 bpd.