By Lethbridge Herald on September 2, 2022.
David Yager
TROY MEDIA
One of the best ideas that has gone nowhere is the creation of resource corridors for long-distance transportation infrastructure using routes where land-use and development issues are resolved in advance.
Historically, the path of transportation infrastructures like railroads, highways, power lines and pipelines has been “map and ruler,” a straight line at the lowest cost. Geography, like lakes and mountains, was the main reason for route changes.
Fortunately, most of Canada’s long-distance infrastructure was built well before the population grew significantly. The national railroads are a perfect example.
Many communities only exist because the railroad came first, sparing seeking permission to knock down houses and buildings to run a rail line through town.
Since then, building anything extending beyond the property line of your backyard has become increasingly difficult, if not impossible, be it pipelines, power lines, or even roads.
New acronyms emerged. NIMBY, or Not In My Backyard. More obstacles led to BANANA, Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anybody.
In Canada, so many projects have been studied, delayed, cancelled or prohibited that we have rightfully earned an international reputation as the country that can’t build anything.
This is counterintuitive because long-distance infrastructure is the only reason our nation exists in its current form and is wealthy enough to obstruct continued development.
A determined creator of infrastructure conflicts has been Canada’s landlocked oil and gas industry, with enormous resources and no access to tidewater.
New pipelines to the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans and the Gulf of Mexico have been proposed then opposed by environmentalists, landowners, municipalities, provinces, states and countries.
Billions of dollars have been vaporized on uncompleted projects.
The Trudeau government alone is not to blame: BC, Ontario, Quebec, Montreal, Vancouver, Montana, Minnesota, Nebraska, and the U.S. government are also opponents.
An innovative solution to resolve the pipeline wars was the creation of resource corridors, pre-arranged right-of-ways over long distances that would be wide enough to accommodate power lines, pipelines, railways and even roads.
Canada has enough empty or underpopulated space that it could avoid the higher concentrations of people through planning, ingenuity and determination. Resource corridors are an obvious way to avoid most of the conflicts.
Soldiering on in its determination to maintain Canada’s standard of living despite itself is the C2C2C Unity Corridor project, which describes itself as a “… neutral national entity championing the development of a resilient network of corridors that can link Canada’s economic opportunities, help create more resilient supply chains and support access to global markets.”
Founded in 2018, C2C2C’s idea is to change the channel on development applications from “why” to “what and where” by dealing with economic, land use, environmental and social impact issues in advance.
The first question is fundamental. Should the country’s population and economy continue to grow? This answer is invariably yes, if for no other reason than even development opponents dare not say no.
Then the next step is what, how and where. It is at this step where everything bogs down.
The C2C2C approach is materially different from the current process, whereby a developer wants to undertake a multi-stakeholder project.
The sponsor’s interests, most often commercial, are clear. But the benefits to those affected are not.
What makes C2C2C relevant today is that world events have finally put the need for development before the project itself. The narrative on oil and gas development, in particular, has finally changed.
Due to a worldwide energy shortage and the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland uttered words not spoken outside of western Canada in years: “(Canada has) a lot of energy.
I think it is a political responsibility for us as a country to support our allies with energy security. This is a very tough moment for many European countries right now as they shift from their dependence on Russian oil and gas, and I think it’s very important for Canada to step up and say, ‘We’re going to help you.’”
This is exactly C2C2C’s purpose.
The organization has an experienced leadership team, including Jerry Demchuk, who has a long career in major oil and gas project development.
He is supported by industry veteran Bob Steele, Indigenous leader and energy advocate Chris Sankey, and former B.C. attorney general Bud Smith.
Advisors include Preston Manning, a tireless supporter of responsible but continued resource development.
If and when Canada wakes up and starts doing things again, it will have to be done differently. Most elements of the consultation and engagement process are permanent.
But groups like C2C2C understand this and can provide a resource and catalyst for private sector development proponents who by now may be discouraged by a decade of “no” and have given up or moved their business elsewhere.
The world has changed dramatically. Even the Liberal government is saying different things. Resource corridors could be the catalyst to getting something done.
Because the world needs Canada’s help.
David Yager is an oilfield service executive, oil and gas writer, and energy policy analyst. He is author of From Miracle to Menace – Alberta, A Carbon Story.
© Troy Media
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It hasn’t been helpful that ‘Alberta,’ i.e. AB Conservative governments, have been guilty of really poor long range planning. We certainly experienced the ‘oil and gas development overrules everything in rural Alberta,’ when we lived and farmed there. They ran roughshod over us.