R8国际娱乐

Court blocks Alberta鈥檚 move to cut off oil flow to British Columbia

Robert Tuttle September 25, 2019

CALGARY (Bloomberg) - Alberta鈥檚 efforts to punish neighboring British Columbia for opposing a major crude pipeline expansion are on hold, at least for now.

A Canadian federal court on Tuesday blocked an Alberta law that would have allowed the oil-producing province to cut or reduce fossil fuel shipments to its neighbor amid a dispute over the planned expansion of the Trans Mountain Pipeline. The line carries crude and gasoline produced in Alberta鈥檚 oil sands to a port near Vancouver.

British Columbia 鈥渄emonstrated that an embargo of the nature evoked by the members of Alberta鈥檚 legislature when debating the Act would cause irreparable harm to the residents of British Columbia,鈥 the court ruled.

The legislation, called the Preserving Canada鈥檚 Economic Prosperity Act, was passed in April after the election of a conservative government under Premier Jason Kenney. Defending oil sands developments and pipelines is a central tenet of his premiership.

B.C. leaders oppose the Trans Mountain project while Alberta views the pipeline as essential, given the shortage of export lines that has prompted the government to impose mandatory production limits. The federal government bought the Trans Mountain pipeline last year after Kinder Morgan Inc., the previous owner, threatened to halt the expansion amid B.C. opposition.

Connect with R8国际娱乐
Connect with R8国际娱乐, the upstream industry's most trusted source of forecast data, industry trends, and insights into operational and technological advances.