It’s crunch time on Kinder Morgan

Brace yourselves. After three long years, the National Energy Board will issue its recommendation on the Kinder Morgan pipeline later this week. Since the regulator has rubber stamped every oil pipeline it has ever assessed, the NEB is widely expected to recommend a ‘yes’ on Kinder Morgan, with a laundry list of conditions attached.

Before we all get depressed, remember that the NEB doesn’t call the shots – it’s Cabinet that makes the final decision on Kinder Morgan. The NEB report is just one more chance for us to repeat the Prime Minister’s own words back to him: “While governments may grant permits, only communities can grant permission.” And BC does not give permission for the Kinder Morgan pipeline.

The review process leading up to this week’s recommendation has lost all credibility, as has the NEB itself. The federal government acknowledged this back in January when it announced an additional round of consultation on Kinder Morgan to inform its ultimate decision in December. The credibility crisis also appears to be behind the selection of the three-member Ministerial panel announced today to consult with communities and Indigenous groups along the pipeline and tanker route.

The Ministerial panel members come from diverse backgrounds, unlike the members of the previous NEB panel who all had deep ties to the oil and energy sector. Like their predecessors, however, the new panel faces an impossible task – gaining social license for Kinder Morgan – and will hear the same answer – a resounding NO from First Nations, municipalities and the public.

You can check out some of these voices in a new interactive map from our friends at the Wilderness Committee, which shows major concerns from 12 municipalities and 38 First Nations along the proposed pipeline and tanker route.  The map is part of a brand-new hub website we have launched with the growing network of groups working together to stop the Kinder Morgan pipeline, to keep you up to speed with all the latest action in the campaign.

So what’s next? It’s time to organize!

The panel will hold holding open public meetings along the pipeline and tanker route from June till October, and we need you to be there! This is our last, best chance to tell the government why the Kinder Morgan pipeline is the wrong choice for our region. We are coordinating with our allies to make sure every public meeting is filled to the rafters, and the online comments are flooded with concerned residents speaking up for the coast, climate and communities.

One of the biggest failings of the previous NEB process was the decision to exclude thousands of people like you from having your say about Kinder Morgan.  Please take a moment now and pledge to make your voice heard. We’ll keep you in the loop as public meetings are announced, and make sure you have all the information you need to take part.

Break Free from Kinder Morgan, photo by Mike Hudema / Facebook

Break Free from Kinder Morgan, photo by Mike Hudema / Facebook

It’s crunch time in this long fight, and if you’ve been following along from the sidelines, now is the time to dive in – because make no mistake, we have our work cut out for us to stop this pipeline. The Prime Minister is under huge pressure from the oil industry and the Alberta government to get a pipeline built to the coast. We’ve heard repeated statements from Ottawa about the need to get Canadian resources to market. Officially, the BC government does not support the Kinder Morgan project in its current form, but talks optimistically about ‘getting to yes.’  This is a high stakes political chess game – and it’s our job to show that we will not allow the BC coast to become a pawn to be sacrificed to the pipeline pushers.

We have come too far together to stop now. Join us this summer, and let’s make enough noise to ensure that the Prime Minister has no choice but to send Kinder Morgan packing.

3 thoughts on “It’s crunch time on Kinder Morgan

  1. I traveled to Vancouver to be with Break Free and over 7000 people last Saturday. It was an amazing day with people of all ages and although some of us said we would do civil disobedience, the police decided not to arrest anyone. I am ready to join any group on Vancouver Island to stop Kinder Morgan from building their pipeline…Jean McLaren Gabriola Island BC.

  2. You also must include in any messaging YOUR SUPPORT for FIRST NATIONS title & rights!!! Xwenitum (non-native) people upholding a genuine relationship & unity with the indigenous peoples of these lands & waters WIL:L BE SO POWER-FULL!!

    I am from the Tsleil-Waututh & when we speak we are INCLUSIVE… we relate & understand the concerns & the rights of xwenitum people, we need that same respect. My late grandfather Grand Chief John L. George, taught me that living in the metropolis that is Vancouver, we MUST learn how to “get along”. Sitting at his kitchen table he would look out onto the Inlet & Burnaby & Vancouver & say “…Because THEY”RE not going anywhere and WE:RE not going anywhere, we need to find a way to get co-exist.”

    I implore you all reading this…remember us, First Nations, when you’re speaking, or “messaging” about our beauty-full places we all call home. We are all singing the same song, we just have to get in sync now…

    Hay ce:p awulth si:em ‘i si-yaya ~ thanking all of you respected relatives & friends

    Carleen Thomas
    Intergovernmental Relations
    Sacred Trust Initiative
    Tsleil-Waututh Nation

    • Carleen,
      I (and we at GSA) are so full of respect and gratitude for all that you and Tsleil-Waututh are doing to protect our shared lands and waters. We wholeheartedly agree that First Nations rights and title must be central to all our work, and that respecting rights and title means that the Kinder Morgan project cannot go forward. The Kinder Morgan review process has utterly failed to properly consult First Nations, and as a signatory to the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Canada must not approve this pipeline when First Nations do not consent. Thank you for your work and your leadership.
      In solidarity,
      Alexandra

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *