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Does Trudeau have a Trans Mountain plan that goes beyond talk?

Kinder Morgan issued an ultimatum on the weekend to the federal and B.C. governments over its proposed expansion of the Trans-Mountain pipeline. But it hasn't managed to shift the prime minister away from his talking points.

Even as Premier Notley warns of a constitutional 'crisis', the PM clings to the script

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau seems determined to stick to his script on the Trans Mountain project, even as the project's supporters grow more alarmed at its prospects for failure. (Chad Hipolito/Canadian Press)

Kinder Morgan issued an ultimatum on the weekend to the federal and B.C. governments over its proposed expansion of the Trans-Mountain pipeline.

It couldn't have been clearer. But the only government that appears to be taking it seriously is the one in Alberta.

To recap:Kinder Morgan said it is suspending all non-essential spending on the $7.4-billion project to expand the existing pipeline connecting the Alberta oilsands tothe port of Vancouver-Burnaby. CEO Steve Keanwent further and set a deadline unless the company receives "clarity" by the end ofnext month on whether the work can be completed, Kinder Morgan might choose tojust walk away rather than put more of his shareholders' money at risk.

That last bit certainly caught the attention of Alberta Premier Rachel Notley.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is warning of a constitutional 'crisis' over B.C.'s attempts to block the Trans Mountain project. (Dean Bennett/Canadian Press)

Her province, she said, will consider buying into the project if that's what it takes to get it done. She warned of the economic damage being done by the delaynot just to her province but toBritish Columbia, where fellow NDP Premier John Horgan remains adamant that the project poses a threat to both coastline and climate.

Notley also offered a warning Monday about what would happen to Ottawa's constitutional authority should the project fail toproceed.

A constitutional crisis?

"There are those out there who are, at this point,calling this moment we are in a constitutional crisis for the country," Notleysaid. "And I don't know really if that's too far off.

"If the federal government allows its authority to be challenged in this way, if the national interest is given to the extremes on the left or the right, and if the voices of the moderate majority of Canadians are forgotten, the reverberations of that will tear at the fabric of Confederation for many many years to come."

The Constitution'sdivision of power doesn't appear to be uppermost in the prime minister's mind. His calculations are political.

The Liberals approved this project, allowing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to claim he succeeded where the previous Conservative government failed in getting Alberta's bitumen to tidewater.

The project was part of the prime minister's effortto convinceCanadians that it is indeed possible to be both pro-economy and pro-environment.

Trudeau on Kinder Morgan

6 years ago
Duration 1:59
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke to reporters in Montreal on Monday

"That was our commitment," Trudeau said Monday. "And it goes together with a national price on carbon and a historic oceans protection plan that is going to keep our coasts safe. This is all a package together."

But it's a package without a bow.

Horgan says his government will continue to try to tie up the project.His calculations are just as political as Trudeau's. Blocking the project was a core campaign commitment of Horgan's just a year ago, and it's central to the pact signed with the three-member Green Party caucus whose support the NDP needs to stay in power.

So what could Ottawa do to satisfy Alberta and B.C.?

How does Trudeau ensure the project gets built without jeopardizing the seats of federal Liberal MPs in B.C.'s lower mainland, where pipeline politics will play a big role in the next federal election less than two years from now?

Sticking to the script

So far, Trudeau's approach appears to be to continue reciting the same talking points.

"We will continue to look at all our options, legal, regulatory and financial," Natural Resources Jim Carr said in an interview on Monday speaking as if Kinder Morgan's ultimatum changed nothing, or the company's deadline isn't less than two months away.

Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr says the government is keeping all options open to get the pipeline expansion built. (CBC)

Is the federal government prepared to follow Notley's lead and offer some financial commitment to Kinder Morgan?

"All options are on the table," Carr replied.

Is Ottawa prepared to withhold federal funding to British Columbia for, say, infrastructure projects or child care spaces and the like?

"We will examine everything," Carr said, "but I don't think talking quid pro quos is going to get us any closer to where we want to be."

The federal government also seems uninterested in referring the issue to the Supreme Court of Canada for a determination. Horgan repeated his government's willingness to refer its own question on jurisdiction to the B.C. Supreme Court. But given Kinder Morgan's new deadline, and the time it takes for cases to be heard, he's certainly in no hurry to start the process.

Trudeau alsocould invokesection 92(10)of the Constitution and declare the pipeline to be a project in the 'national interest', something federal Conservatives have urged him to do. But, as with most of the options, the constitutional tool comes with considerable risk to the government's political capital in a province where the Liberals want to hold on to as many seats as possible.

So the government continues with its old, standby refrains. All options are being considered. This pipeline will be built. Canada needs to get world prices for its oil.

The words are the same. The only difference is the new sound in the background:

Tick tock.