B.C. government lawyers defend certification of Coastal GasLink pipeline - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. government lawyers defend certification of Coastal GasLink pipeline

Arguments over the extension of the environmental assessment certificate for a controversial natural gas pipeline resumed today in British Columbia Supreme Court.

Office of the Wet'suwet'en is seeking order quashing environmental assessment certificate

The scales of justice statue at B.C. Supreme Court with greenery and the buildings skylight roof in the background.
The Office of the Wet'suwet'en is in B.C. Supreme Court seeking an order quashing the decision to extend the environmental assessment certificate for the Coastal GasLink pipeline. (David Horemans/CBC)

Arguments over the extension of the environmental assessment certificate for a naturalgaspipelinein B.C. resumed in court Friday, with lawyers for Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs telling a judge an evaluation is needed on the potential risk of violence to Indigenous women and girls.

Lawyers for the Office of the Wet'suwet'en are seeking an order in B.C. Supreme Court quashing the decision to extend the certificate forCoastalGasLink's 670-kilometrepipelineproject, which has been the source of national protests.

They argued in part that B.C.'s Environmental Assessment Office did not meaningfully address the findings of the 2019 report from the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls when it approved the extension.

They also pointed to more than 50 instances ofCoastalGaslink's failure to adhere to existing conditions throughout last year, arguing it's not clear whether the company's track record of non-compliance was considered by the director when making the decision.

They said on Thursday the regulatory agency has the power to attach new conditions when it extends a certificate under B.C.'s Environmental Assessment Act.

Coastal GasLink's 670-kilometre pipeline project has been the source of national protests, including this rail blockade in Toronto in February. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Counsel for the Environmental Assessment Office disputed their interpretation of the legislation on Friday, telling the court that its executive director already has the power to amend the conditions of a certificate outside the scope of an extension application.

Karrie Wolfe also argued that quashing the extension ofCoastal GasLink's certificate could leave thepipelinethat's under construction in northern B.C. in a "vacuum,'' since the original certificate expired last October. If the decision is quashed, she said there would be no certificate to attach conditions to.

Caily DiPuma, counsel for the Office of the Wet'suwet'en, suggested an alternative remedy could be an interim injunction pausing construction until the regulator reconsiders its decision.

"The risk of violence and harm to Indigenous women and girls persists today and every day the project construction continues without a proper assessment of that harm and mitigation as necessary,'' she told the court on Friday.

Decision to grant extension 'unreasonable'

The opposing lawyers also squared off over the scope and the meaning of records from the decision to extend thepipeline certificate.

Wolfe asserted the records show the Environmental Assessment Office and its director were handling issues of non-compliance as well as concerns over work camps for resource extraction projects in relation to gender-based harm.

DiPuma conceded the documents are part of the "universe of records'' related to the decision, but said "we can't know whether they were considered by the executive director in making the decision.''

On Thursday, DiPuma said the decision to grant the extension was unreasonable, arguing that the assessment office failed to assess potential gender-based harms or offer any mitigation measures.

Wolfe replied on Friday that even if the office had a duty to provide its reasons for a given decision, they do not have to be exhaustive or address every single comment or concern.

Lawyers forCoastalGasLinkappeared briefly on Friday, but court was adjourned before they could fully present their positions. The hearing resumes Oct. 16.

The Office of the Wet'suwet'en is a non-profit society governed by several hereditary chiefs whose opposition to thepipeline sparked countrywide protests in February. Five elected Wet'suwet'en band councils have signed agreements with the company approving construction.