Can Alberta and Saskatchewan stop exporting oil to B.C. or are the provinces bluffing?
B.C.'s attorney general says limiting oil exports is unconstitutional
Alberta and Saskatchewan are threatening to limit oil and gas exports to British Columbia, but some are questioning whether the two provinces have the constitutional authority to do so.
While the majority of gasoline used in the Pacific province is shipped through the existing Trans Mountain pipeline, B.C.'s government is opposing its expansion.
Unconstitutional, says B.C. attorney general
B.C.'s attorney general, David Eby, spoke out on Alberta's legislation Tuesday, saying it's unconstitutional for one province to use energy policy to punish another. He threatened to sue if a new law introduced in Alberta causes gasoline prices in B.C. to skyrocket.
Eby said the legislation is clearly a bluff.
If they did try and use it, would be in court immediately seeking an injunction to stop them.- B.C.'s attorney general David Eby
Trevor Tombe, an economist with the University of Calgary, also said he isn't sure if the laws proposed by Alberta and Saskatchewan could be implemented because the constitution says that export restrictions cannot be levied in a way that is discriminatory across provinces within Canada, in terms of the prices charged or supplies delivered.
"This is clearly about political signalling and ratcheting up pressure on British Columbia rather than really trying to lay out a coherent and internally consistent legal strategy," Tombe said.
Moe says he's not bluffing
If the legislation were enacted, Tombe said it could do a lot of harm to all parties, as they rely on each other as trade partners.
"It would significantly disrupt potential supplies to British Columbia, leading to days or potentially weeks of higher prices there than would otherwise be the case," he continued. "Hopefully it never actually gets to the point where either province chooses to implement this legislation."
"None of us want to be in this situation, but we feel forced with British Columbia standing in front and trying to slow a pipeline [expansion] that has been approved by the federal government, an area where they absolutely have no responsibility or no jurisdiction," Moe said on CBC's Power and Politics on Tuesday. "So this is a very troubling place for us to be and we feel compelled that we have to take action on this and we are not bluffing on this."
Limiting exports out of Alberta could create shortages in B.C., forcing it to look elsewhere for gasoline, primarily Saskatchewan, Moe said. He said that's when the province would follow Alberta's lead by making sure energy products are not available.
Province urged to re-think plan
Saskatchewan NDP leader Ryan Meili said he's concerned about the impact such a move would have on people in the province who work in the oil and gas sector.
"That would have a very significant and immediate impact on our economy and on workers right here, so any legislation really needs to be viewed through the lens of, 'Is this appropriate? Will this achieve what it's intended to achieve? And what are the unintended consequences and how can those be avoided?'" Meili said.
This is a classic case of the Province's failure to consult.- FSIN Chief Bobby Cameron
The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN) released a statement Tuesday saying any legislation that is drafted which would limit energy exports to British Columbia should be done so in consultation with First Nations people.
"We have First Nations in our region who are concerned about pipelines running through their treaty, traditional and reserve lands, particularly in light of the recent Husky Oil spill. We also have First Nations in Saskatchewan that participate within the oil and gas industry in this province" said FSIN Chief Bobby Cameron. "This is a classic case of the province's failure to consult."
Moe said he has fears that Kinder Morgan will pull completely out of the pipeline project
Kinder Morgan has set May 31 as a deadline for deciding whether it will move forward with the project.
Alberta's government has said it may take action against B.C. if investor certainty isn't secured by then.
With files from Micki Cowan, Power and Politics and CBC British Columbia