Alberta Premier Danielle Smith reacted to federal cabinet minister Steven Guilbeault’s comments about Canada not needing new pipelines, a day after Prime Minister Mark Carney said they could be built if there is a consensus.
Before the first meeting of the new federal cabinet on May 14, Guilbeault said there is no reason to build new pipelines if the government-owned Trans Mountain pipeline is only operating at 40 percent capacity. He added global demand for oil is estimated to peak by 2028–2029.
Smith said these types of comments by Guilbeault were an example of how he had been an obstacle to Alberta during his tenure as environment minister. Guilbeault was shuffled out of the role by Carney in March and put in charge of the Canadian heritage portfolio.
“We ask for the new environment minister [Julie Dabrusin] to disavow his comments and commit to working with Alberta to build new pipelines to access new markets,” Smith said.
The latest spat between Smith and Guilbeault comes after a federal election campaign heavily focused on strengthening Canada’s economy in the face of U.S. tariffs. Carney has pledged to speed up the approval of major projects, and said Canada needed to develop more projects for “clean and conventional energy.”
Canada’s most valuable export is crude oil and most of the production flows south to the United States. There is also no pipeline connecting Alberta and Eastern provinces, which are dependent on U.S. operators.
Asked by reporters about the matter before the cabinet meeting, Guilbeault pushed back.
“People should remember that we bought a pipeline, Trans Mountain, and that is only used right now at about 40 percent capacity,” he said. “So I think before we start talking about building an entire new pipeline, maybe we should maximize the use of existing infrastructure.”
Guilbeault also said there are no investors to build an East-West pipeline. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said during the election campaign there is no investor because of federal laws like the Impact Assessment Act (formerly known as Bill C-69) that make it difficult to build major infrastructure.
Carney told CTV News he’s open to making changes to the Impact Assessment Act, to help move projects ahead. He has however insisted that his government will maintain the legislation, despite objection by Premier Smith.
Guilbeault wasn’t as committed to making changes to the law, saying “these are important conversations that we will need to have in the coming weeks.”
Taking over the environment portfolio in Carney’s new cabinet is Toronto MP Julie Dabrusin. She had no immediate public comment and The Epoch Times reached out to her department but didn’t immediately hear back.
Smith said the carbon price for businesses has become “too high to bear” and is negatively impacting competitiveness at a time of heightened economic uncertainty. Environment Canada reacted by saying that when a province makes a significant change to its system, the federal government has to reassess the “stringency of that system against benchmark standards.”
“Albertans are proud Canadians that want this nation to be strong, prosperous, and united, but we will no longer tolerate having our industries threatened and our resources landlocked by Ottawa,” she said.
Carney responded to Smith’s post by saying the two leaders are “focused on bringing down the cost of living and increasing opportunities in the energy sector for hard working Albertans.”