Economist Withdraws From Kinder Morgan Review
- Details
- Published on Thursday, 21 May 2015 06:15
- Written by editor




Shooting the Messenger: Tracing Canada’s Anti-Enviro Movement

In recent years a lot of attention has been paid to the over-dramatized 'foreign funding' of Canada's environmental organizations. Meanwhile, little light has being shed on the funding of citizen groups defending the oil and gas industry, although they seem to be proliferating across the country.
Unlike environmental groups, whose spokespeople have a clear public profile and whose organizations have long-standing missions, publicly-known board members and financial records, the same cannot be said of pop-up defenders of oil interests such as the Ethical Oil Institute and British Columbians for Prosperity.
Their activities remain shrouded in secrecy. Read More
Canadian Government Called on to Regulate Fracking

The Council of Canadians called on the federal government last week to implement regulation of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, in Canada. The process, widely used for unconventional oil and gas recovery in western Canada, is linked to numerous human and environmental health threats and currently faces bans or moratoria in Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, as well as Newfoundland and Labrador. Read More

First Nations’ consent to the Site C dam should determine the project’s fate, according to Amnesty International Canada’s Craig Benjamin.
Speaking at a public education event with West Moberly First Nations’ Chief Roland Willson, Benjamin said Canada is breaking its own laws when it comes to the rights of First Nations.
The West Moberly First Nation is launching a legal challenge of the B.C. government’s recent approval of the Site C dam, a $9 billion dollar hydroelectric project that will flood over 100 square kilometres of forest and rich agricultural farmland. Read More

Economist and former ICBC president Robyn Allan withdrew from the National Energy Board’s (NEB) review of the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project recently, saying she can no longer “endorse a process that is not working.”
In a letter addressed to Sherri Young, secretary of the NEB, Allan said the “review is not conducted on a level playing field” and that because the panel is “not an impartial referee…the game is rigged.”
Allan said she began to seriously question the process when oral cross-examination was removed from the process. Read More
Just How Risky is Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion?

With the May 27 deadline for evidence submission to the National Energy Board’s review of the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion project fast approaching, the cities of Burnaby and Vancouver are stepping up.
Last Wednesday, the City of Burnaby quietly released a report outlining the risks and possible implications of a fire at the Burnaby tanker terminal. The results, to quote Mayor Derek Corrigan, are “comprehensive and jarring.” r15 |r0
