B.C. won’t use court ruling as tactic in pipeline battle: environment minister
VANCOUVER — Environment Minister George Heyman says British Columbia can’t stop the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project but will use a court-ordered review of its environmental assessment certificates to protect the environment and coastal economies.
In a decision released Tuesday, the B.C. Court of Appeal ordered the provincial government to reconsider the certificates because they were granted on the basis of assessments by the National Energy Board that have since been overturned and completed again with new conditions.
Heyman told reporters in Vancouver that the province is working on a plan to conduct the review and consult with Indigenous communities.
“It’s not our goal to use this court decision as a tactic,” he said, adding that any power to stop the project lies with the federal courts and government.