Alberta plans to align its Trans Mountain
pipeline expansion legal efforts with those of the federal government, and provincial officials are heading to Ottawa this week to figure out how that can happen.
Not exact matches
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's court case over the flow of heavy oil through the province could be damaged by the NDP government's previous positions against the
expansion of the Trans Mountain
pipeline, says a
legal expert.
When faced with countless illegal blockades by protestors and
legal challenges from the British Columbia NDP coalition government, Kinder Morgan has suspended the Trans Mountain
pipeline expansion spending on all non-essential activities and related spending related to the project.
VANCOUVER — New Democrat MP Kennedy Stewart says he knew he'd face
legal punishment when he violated an injunction at a Kinder Morgan work site but he has no regrets about protesting the
expansion of the Trans Mountain
pipeline.
And at the moment every single major
pipeline (as well as incremental
expansions to existing
pipelines) is facing mounting public,
legal, and political opposition — all of which has been driven by people power that refuses to accept the devastating impacts of the Alberta tar sands on the climate, the environment, human rights, and communities.
Raising funds to cover
legal defence costs stemming from civil disobedience in opposition to the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain
pipeline expansion.
A failed two - day court challenge to an anti-democratic, corporate
legal attack is the latest chapter in the 2014 Battle of Burnaby Mountain over the Kinder Morgan tar sands
pipeline expansion project.
Northeastern U.S.
pipeline company — provided
legal advice and regulatory assistance for the relevant environmental requirements for a major
pipeline expansion project in New York, including water quality certification / conditions, stormwater permitting / management, environmental restoration and related matters
A range of looming
legal, political and economic risks threaten to delay and possibly derail Kinder Morgan Canada's increasingly controversial interprovincial
pipeline expansion project.
VANCOUVER — New Democrat MP Kennedy Stewart says he knew he'd face
legal punishment when he violated an injunction at a Kinder Morgan work site but he has no regrets about protesting the
expansion of the Trans Mountain
pipeline.
Retaliation was swift with Alberta Premier Rachel Notley threatening
legal action and economic sanctions against the province of British Columbia for putting up another roadblock in the
expansion of the
pipeline.
Two years later, this decision could become a factor in an ongoing
legal challenge at the Federal Court of Appeal over whether the Crown adequately consulted First Nations before announcing its approval of the Kinder Morgan
pipeline expansion on Nov. 29, 2016.
«There's no question, in the case of
pipelines, that it's a federal decision» whether to permit the
expansion, says Gregory McDade, managing partner at Ratcliff & Company LLP in Vancouver and
legal counsel for the City of Burnaby, where the proposed
expansion would terminate.