Northern Gateway pipeline could go north
With Mackenzie Valley pipeline on hold, Northwest Territories looking at 'other options'

Should B.C. Premier Christy Clark follow through on her promise to block the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline if her conditions for the project aren't met, Northwest Territories Premier Bob McLeod says he would be prepared to step in and support a "northern route" that would see bitumen shipped from Alberta north to the N.W.T. and out to Asia.
That's because the Mackenzie Valley pipeline, a $16.2-billion project intended to transport natural gas from the Beaufort Sea through the Northwest Territories, south to a hub in northwestern Alberta and out to North American markets, has been put on hold after its investors suspended the funding.
In an interview that aired Saturday on CBC Radio's The House, McLeod said his preference is to see the Mackenzie Valley pipeline project go ahead but if the project is dead then he is prepared to look at "all the possibilities."
"If all the doors are closed, then we're prepared to look at other options," McLeod told guest host Louise Elliott.
After a lengthy review, Canada's National Energy Board (NEB) approved the Mackenzie Valley pipeline in Dec. 2010, more than six years after the project's developers submitted their plans. However, development of the pipeline was proposed in the 1970s.
The NEB gave the developers, a five-member consortium, until the end of 2013 to make a final decision on whether to proceed with the project. But in April, two of the partners announced they were either suspending the funding or scaling it back, citing low prices for natural gas and ongoing negotiations with the federal government on incentives to lower the costs of the project.
McLeod said it would help if the federal government would deem the Mackenzie Valley pipeline to be in Canada's "national interest," just as it has already done with the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline project.
The N.W.T. can't afford to have its "natural resources stranded for another 40 years," McLeod said.
No 'direct discussions'
Although no "direct discussions"