Available for comment: Prentice's Energy East lobby trip to Ontario and Quebec, Council of Canadians urges Wynne and Couillard not to bend[
http://canadians.org/media/available-co ... ians-urges ]
Media Availability December 3, 2014
Toronto – Today Alberta Premier Jim Prentice met with Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne to lobby for the Energy East pipeline, after the Ontario and Quebec premiers announced seven conditions the pipeline must meet. Wynne announced that in analyzing greenhouse emissions, Ontario would only consider the emissions from the pipeline itself and not from the tar sands.
In response, the Council of Canadians urged Ontario to stay steadfast in imposing conditions on Energy East. The Council denounced the decision to not consider the full impacts of the tar sands on the environment.
“Wynne’s refusal to consider how the pipeline will spur more climate pollution in the tar sands is more than disappointing, it is wrong. The tar sands are reaching the limits of pipeline capacity. At 1.1 million barrels per day, the pipeline will absolutely unlock increased production in Canada’s fastest growing source of climate pollution,” says Andrea Harden-Donahue, Energy and Climate Justice Campaigner with the Council of Canadians. “The real question now is whether the Ontario and Quebec premiers will rigorously apply the conditions. Also, the Energy East pipeline could rupture, causing a serious oil spill that would threaten drinking water sources.” [
http://www.canadians.org/publications/e ... eets-water ]
Filling the Energy East pipeline would spur an additional 30 to 32 million tonnes of carbon pollution every year. [
http://www.pembina.org/media-release/2520 ] This would undo the progress made in Ontario’s phase-out of coal. It would cross critical waterways in Ontario and Quebec, including drinking water sources such as the Nipigon River that flows quickly into Lake Superior, North Bay’s Trout Lake, the Ottawa River, and the St. Lawrence.
TransCanada has had five pipeline ruptures in the last 14 months. TransCanada wants to convert a forty-year-old gas pipeline to carry oil, something U.S. regulators recently warned could have a significant impact on the pipeline’s safety and integrity. [
http://insideclimatenews.org/news/20141 ... t-its-kind ]
Mark Calzavara, Ontario, Quebec and Nunavut Organizer with the Council of Canadians concludes, “This is a risky plan that will only benefit Big Oil. A few short-term jobs are not worth putting the long-term safety of our communities, waterways and climate on the line. Ontario and Quebec are right to protect their residents’ interests.”
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Wynne and Couillard backtracking on the climate test for the Energy East pipeline[
http://canadians.org/blog/wynne-and-cou ... t-pipeline ]
December 3, 2014 - 1:11 pm
Ontario premier Kathleen Wynne and Quebec premier Philippe Couillard are both signalling that their climate test for the proposed Energy East pipeline could be very weak. On November 24, they stated that when evaluating the 1.1 million barrels per day pipeline they would, "Take into account the contribution to greenhouse gas emissions." [
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... e21714915/ ]
But just a few days later, Wynne is now saying, "No, we’re not talking about upstream emissions" [
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... e21907743/ ] and Couillard has commented, "Whatever the future of the TransCanada project, the extraction will take place. So it doesn’t add anything to the debate to look at [upstream emissions]. What we really want to see is the sum of greenhouse gases over the Quebec section of the project." [
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... e21907743/ ]
"Upstream emissions" refers to the greenhouse gas emissions created by the increased tar sands production fuelled, in this instance, by the 1.1 million barrels per day Energy East pipeline. It has been estimated that the export pipeline would allow for a 40 per cent expansion of the tar sands that would produce at least 32 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions every year, the equivalent to 7 million new cars on the road.
The Globe and Mail reports, "Ms. Wynne said Wednesday what she will only consider are the relatively small emissions from any work that has to be done on the line in Ontario – such as exhaust fumes from construction vehicles." [
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... e21907743/ ]
Council of Canadians energy and climate justice campaigner Andrea Harden-Donahue has responded by saying, "Wynne’s refusal to consider how the pipeline will spur more climate pollution in the tar sands is more than disappointing, it is wrong. The tar sands are reaching the limits of pipeline capacity. At 1.1 million barrels per day, the pipeline will absolutely unlock increased production in Canada’s fastest growing source of climate pollution." [
http://canadians.org/media/available-co ... ians-urges ]
This is particularly disappointing as the United Nations climate talks are now underway in Lima, Peru. Last December, the Harper government submitted its climate report to the UN that admitted that Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions will continue to rise sharply. Without climate action, the federal government estimates that emissions from Canada’s oil and gas sector will increase by 48 per cent between 2005 and 2030. [
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... d/follows/ ]
We are asking our supporters in Ontario to tell the premier that approving Energy East would "wipe out all the good work we have done in Ontario to lower greenhouse gas emissions and threaten our most important drinking water sources."
To sign that action alert - No Energy East pipeline through Ontario - please click here:[
http://www.canadians.org/no-energyeast-ontario ] .
For more on our campaign to stop the Energy East pipeline, please click here:[
http://canadians.org/energyeast ]
Brent Patterson's blog
[
http://canadians.org/blogs/brent-patterson ]
Political Director of the Council of Canadians
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WIN! Ontario government strengthens position on Energy East pipeline[
http://canadians.org/blog/win-ontario-g ... t-pipeline ]
November 24, 2014 - 8:12 am
The Council of Canadians is pleased that Ontario premier Kathleen Wynne has agreed with the Quebec government on stringent conditions for the proposed 1.1 million barrels per day Energy East pipeline project. We see this as a sign that popular opposition to the pipeline is growing in both provinces and pushing governments to take action.
The conditions the two governments have adopted to evaluate the pipeline are:1. Compliance with the highest available technical standards for public safety and environmental protection;
2. Have world-leading contingency planning an emergency response programs;
3. Proponents and governments consult local communities and fulfill their duty to consult with Aboriginal communities;
4. Take into account the contribution to greenhouse gas emissions;
5. Provide demonstrable economic benefits and opportunities to the people of Ontario and Quebec, in particular in the areas of job creation over both short and long term;
6. Ensure that economic and environmental risks and responsibilities, including remediation, should be borne exclusively by the pipeline companies in the event of a leak or spill on ground or water, and provide financial assurance demonstrating their capability to respond to leaks and spills;
7. Interests of natural gas consumers must be taken into account.
Hopefully too this represents a significant shift from the position Wynne initially took on the Energy East pipeline.
In August 2013, sounding more supportive of the project, she stated, "I'm very open to solutions that are going to work for the people of the country. We need to find ways to work with the other provinces and make sure that we have rational energy planning across the country." [
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/pr ... -1.1337328 ]
And in October 2013, she told a Chamber of Commerce meeting in Calgary that she considered moving crude eastward "a national project". [
http://www.elanpro.ca/2013/10/29/ontari ... -interest/ ]
She also noted that Ontario has to work with other provinces with the understanding that they all share energy needs. [
http://www.therecord.com/news-story/403 ... -pipeline/ ]
And while she said she would put environmental, First Nations and community concerns "at the forefront", she emphasized "rational discussions" about energy policy are needed. [
http://www.therecord.com/news-story/403 ... -pipeline/ ]
That wasn't a satisfactory position to us, so we took action.
– In March 2014, the Toronto Star reported, "Mark Calzavara of the Ontario Council of Canadians said it’s up to the provincial government to step into the pipeline fray to ensure Energy East is safe, if it goes ahead at all. 'We just don’t believe that TransCanada is up to the task and can do it safely and we’re really not very confident that the National Energy Board is up to the task of regulating them', said Calzavara. 'We have to look to the provincial government to say no.'" [
http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2014/03 ... afety.html ]
– We launched an action alert encouraging our supporters to send a message to Premier Wynne. [
http://www.canadians.org/action/no-energyeast ] In that alert, we highlighted the threat the pipeline posed to Ontario waterways, the safety concerns related to converting a natural gas pipeline to moving diluted bitumen, that Energy East is primarily an export pipeline, that the pipeline would mean a substantial increase in greenhouse gas emissions, and that the conversion of the Mainline natural gas pipeline into the Energy East tar sands pipeline would mean a shortage of natural gas for consumers in Ontario.
– Council of Canadians energy and climate justice campaigner Andrea Harden-Donahue also participated in a stakeholders group related to Ontario Energy Board consultations and highlighted that Indigenous rights need to be central in this process, that the pipeline's impacts on provincial waterways and natural gas supplies must be considered, and that the provincial consultations must be meaningful, not like the "the highly staged, one-on-one, trade-show-style open houses TransCanada has held". [
http://rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/council ... -energy-bo ]
– In April 2014, we organized a speaking tour in the Ontario communities of Kenora, Thunder Bay, North Bay, Ottawa, Kemptville and Cornwall to build public awareness in the province that the pipeline posed all risk and no reward. Our key messages on that tour were that the Energy East pipeline posed a threat to Ontario's waterways and that it would spur a 40 per cent increase in tar sands production producing climate pollution equivalent to that of all the cars in Ontario every year. [
http://canadians.org/media/speaking-tou ... -ontarians ]
– And our May 2014 submission to the Ontario Energy Board echoed the concerns raised in our action alert and highlighted that provincial leadership was required. We stated, "Ultimately, we feel the scale of imminent threat presented by the Energy East pipeline, and the abdication of the Harper government of its duties, justifies Ontario’s intervention based on these unacceptable risks. In order to represent Ontarians’ interests, the Premier should speak publicly against the Energy East pipeline." [
http://rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/council ... nergy-east ]
Many of the concerns we raised are now reflected in the seven conditions Wynne and Quebec premier Philippe Couillard agreed to in Toronto on Friday.
While we still have a long way to go in this campaign, their endorsement of the seven conditions and the tone that sets is an important step forward in the eventual rejection of the Energy East pipeline. Furthermore, we believe that if the conditions were seriously applied the pipeline cannot be approved. For instance, given the pipeline would produce at least 32 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions every year, how could Wynne and Couillard endorse the pipeline when they have just promised to take its contribution to greenhouse gas emissions into account?
For more on our campaign in opposition to the Energy East pipeline, please click here:[
http://canadians.org/energyeast ]
Brent Patterson's blog
[
http://canadians.org/blogs/brent-patterson ]
Political Director of the Council of Canadians
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Energy East: new report assesses pipeline’s climate impact[
http://www.pembina.org/media-release/2520 ]
Proposed west-to-east pipeline would have major environmental ramifications
Published Feb. 6, 2014.
OTTAWA — The proposed Energy East pipeline would enable a significant increase in Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions, says a new report from the Pembina Institute.
Climate Implications of the Proposed Energy East Pipeline is the first public estimate of the west-to-east pipeline’s upstream climate impact. It shows that producing the crude needed to fill Energy East could generate up to 32 million tonnes of additional greenhouse gas emissions each year — an even greater impact than the proposed Keystone XL pipeline.
TransCanada is expected to file its regulatory application for Energy East with the National Energy Board in the first half of this year. In anticipation of that application, the report provides two recommendations: that the NEB should include the pipeline’s full upstream impacts in the scope of its review, and that the federal government should end its delays and adopt strong emissions regulations for the oil and gas sector.
Quick facts
•The crude production needed to fill the Energy East pipeline would generate an additional 30 to 32 million tonnes of carbon emissions each year — the equivalent of adding more than seven million cars to Canada’s roads.
•By comparison, filling the proposed Keystone XL pipeline would increase emissions by 22 million tonnes, according to a previous analysis from the Pembina Institute. [
http://www.pembina.org/pub/2407 ]
•Filling the Energy East pipeline would help spur 650,000 to 750,000 barrels per day of additional production from the oilsands.
•Despite numerous requests from interveners and members of the public, the NEB’s last major pipeline review did not consider the environmental impacts of producing the crude that would flow in the pipeline.
Quotes“The oilsands are already Canada’s fastest-growing source of carbon pollution and the Energy East pipeline would help to accelerate production. Any regulatory review should include not only the impact of the pipeline itself, but also the impact of producing the crude that would flow through it.” — Clare Demerse, Federal Policy Director, Pembina Institute
“The oilsands industry plans to triple production by 2030 and building new pipelines is necessary to realize those ambitions. We need to look at the full scope of impacts when evaluating pipelines.” — Erin Flanagan, Analyst, Pembina Institute
-30-
Download a copy of Climate Implications of the Proposed Energy East Pipeline:[
http://www.pembina.org/pub/2519 ]
Contact
Clare Demerse (English / français)
Federal Policy Director
613-562-3447 x222
613-762-7449
Erin Flanagan (English / français)
Analyst
587-581-1701
Bernard Rudny (English / français)
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416-993-2455