PM determined to build pipeline, tackle climate change despite court ruling
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau is standing firm on his government’s commitment to build the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion and to its national climate-change plan — both of which were put in jeopardy by a bombshell court ruling that overturned federal approval for the project.
The government intends to move forward to get the pipeline expansion built “in the right way,” the prime minister said Friday, indicating that the government accepts the Federal Court of Appeal’s criticism of the approval process.
The court ruled Thursday that the National Energy Board’s environmental assessment of the project was fatally flawed because it ignored the potential impact of increased oil tanker traffic off British Columbia’s coast. It also ruled that the federal government had not fulfilled its duty to meaningfully consult with affected Indigenous groups.
“We are taking the time now to understand the court ruling, which addresses two things that are very important to this government — getting the science and the environmental protections right and making sure we are walking forward in a true path of reconciliation and partnership with Indigenous Peoples,” Trudeau said after an event in Oshawa, Ont.

