NEB to issue Trans Mountain pipeline decision today

CBC will host a livestream when the decision is released in Calgary around 2 p.m. MT

Image | Trans Mountain pipeline

Caption: Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain pipeline was built in 1953. The company wants to spend $6.8 billion to nearly triple its capacity. (Kinder Morgan)

The National Energy Board will issue its decision on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion today, after three years of hearings and talks.
But the project still faces two other reviews before any final decision is made.
Kinder Morgan wants to spend $6.8 billion to twin the pipeline and nearly triple its capacity to carry diluted bitumen from the oilsands near Edmonton to Burnaby, B.C., for export.
Whether the NEB recommends the project go ahead today, or not, that will not be the last word on the project.
Earlier this week, the federal government named a three-person panel that will have until Nov. 1 to review environmental impacts and community and First Nation support for the project.
The B.C. government is formally opposed to the project and will also conduct its own assessment, said Environment Minister Mary Polak.
"We have notified the proponents that they will need to go through the process. It looks like the office has relied heavily on information provided through NEB," she said.

Image | Trans Mountain 20141126

Caption: RCMP officers take a protester into custody at an anti-pipeline demonstration in Burnaby, B.C., in 2014. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

The expansion project has already been widely rejected by many in B.C., including Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson, who says the project is not good for his city.
"We will be watching closely what the NEB decides, noting the entire process from the NEB was flawed and a farce," he said.
Those who back the project say it will generate almost $1 billion in economic activity and nearly 34,000 jobs a year.
A decision from the federal cabinet on the expansion is expected by the end of the year.