Calgary Herald

NEB orders Kinder Morgan to stop putting mats in streams

- The Canadian Press and Reuters

The National Energy Board is issuing a stern warning to the company building the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion for installing mats in streams to discourage fish from spawning where the pipeline is to be built.

In a letter on its website, the regulator orders Trans Mountain owner Kinder Morgan, the company building the line from Edmonton to Burnaby, B.C., to stop installing the mats until it has obtained all approvals from the board to allow the start of constructi­on in those areas.

In a blog dated Sept. 12 on the project website, Trans Mountain describes the “innovative use of snow fencing” in streams to protect spawning salmon and trout.

It says its biologists had temporaril­y laid plastic fencing on the bottom of some sections of five streams through mid-August 2017 in preparatio­n for pipeline constructi­on there in early 2018, adding it had identified a total of 26 streams in British Columbia and Alberta where the mats would be used prior to spawning season.

In an email, Trans Mountain spokesman Ali Hounsell says the spawning deterrents were considered a “preventive measure” to minimize environmen­tal impacts, adding the company is working on a response to the NEB order. While the project has federal approval, work on the pipeline itself cannot begin until the NEB determines its precise route, a process that has no firm conclusion date.

The regulator has so far granted permission only for work on a coastal marine terminal, whose capacity needs to be increased to handle the extra crude from the expansion. The Trans Mountain expansion would nearly triple the capacity of the existing pipeline from Alberta to the west coast. Those opposing the project say they are concerned about its potential impact on climate change and increased possibilit­y of spills.

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