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Organizations and community groups condemn

Criticism of the federal government’s review of the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline proposal

PRINCE RUPERT - Criticism of the federal government’s review of the Enbridge Northern

Gateway pipeline proposal is building. Nineteen environmental and community

organizations have written to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency expressing

concern that the terms of reference for the review ignore climate change, tar sands

expansion and the question of allowing oil tankers on B.C.'s North Coast.

“The Enbridge project is provincially, nationally and globally significant and deserves a

thorough and extensive review,” said Oonagh O’Connor, Energy Program Manager for

Living Oceans Society. “If the Joint Review Panel ignores tar sands expansion and the longstanding

oil tanker moratorium, it will be doing a disservice to all Canadians.”

The past eight federal governments have all respected a moratorium on oil tanker traffic on

B.C.'s North Coast, which the current federal government has chosen to ignore.

“Before we look at the impacts of the project, we should be asking whether communities are

willing to allow massive oil tankers on our coast,” said Jennifer Rice, Energy Campaigner for

the T.Buck Suzuki Environmental Foundation.

Tanker spills associated with the Enbridge project would likely affect the coastline of the

world-famous Great Bear Rainforest – the world's largest intact temperate rainforest.

“Most people do not want oil tankers in the Great Bear Rainforest,” said Ian McAllister,

Conservation Director for Pacific Wild. “An oil spill would cause irreversible damage to the

wild salmon, bears and other species that make this region so special.”

A recent Pembina Institute report found the Enbridge pipeline would increase tar sands

output by 30 percent, and add 6.5 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions annually.

“Enbridge’s proposed pipeline and tanker project is inextricably linked to tar sands

expansion,” said Nikki Skuce, Senior Energy Campaigner with Forest Ethics. “The tar sands

are the fastest growing source of climate pollution in Canada, and their impacts must be part

of the project assessment.”

More than 2,000 people wrote the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency regarding

the review’s terms of reference – more submissions than the agency has received for any

other project in its history.

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For more information contact:

Oonagh O’Connor, Living Oceans Society 250-230-6580

Jennifer Rice, T.Buck Suzuki Foundation 250-600-2455

Ian McAllister, Pacific Wild 250-957-2480

Nikki Skuce, Forest Ethics 250-877-7762

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T. Buck Suzuki Environmental Foundation
100 - 326 12th Street New Westminster, B.C. V3M 4H6 Tel: 604-519-3635 Fax: 604-524-6944 tbsef@bucksuzuki.org