Monday, July 29, 2013

A Missive to CN Re: Rail Pipeline Through BC

CN Headquarters
935 de La Gauchetière Street West
Montreal, Quebec H3B 2M9
claude.mongeau@cn.ca
Tel : 514-399-2963

Attention: Claude Mongeau, CN President and CEO

January 29, 2013
Dear Monsieur Claude Mongeau,

We last wrote a couple of years ago expressing our concerns about CN’s Pipeline-on-Rails proposal. It now appears as though CN has started shipping oil - although no tar sands oil as of yet - in British Columbia. Given the potential magnitude of the project and its impacts, we are asking that you undertake consultation with impacted First Nations and community members should CN decide to move forward with its proposal to ship tar sands oil through BC.

Both your company and the Port of Prince Rupert acknowledge that at this time CN is not moving crude oil to Canada’s west coast ports, where there are no terminals in place to unload crude oil from rail cars to  ocean vessels for export. However, given the current momentum behind transporting oil by rail and the unlikely construction of new pipelines, we’re once again writing to express our opposition for such a proposal through British Columbia.
 
As with certain pipeline proposals, we are concerned about the upstream impacts associated with tar sands production, including rising greenhouse gas emissions. Confirmation that carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from tar sands production are polluting Alberta’s lakes is grave concern to both the surrounding ecosystems and local communities.

We are particularly concerned about our wild salmon watersheds and the potential impacts an oil spill could have on them. A train derailment and spill into the Skeena or Fraser watersheds could have tragic consequences to salmon, wildlife, tourism and drinking water supplies. CN’s rail line runs parallel to the Skeena River for several hundred kilometres, and crosses the upper tributaries of both the Fraser and Skeena watersheds numerous times. Even a small oil spill could be devastating to fish stocks depending on
the time of year.

It is our understanding that CN has already begun a “geographic response planning” pilot program along the Skeena River to identify river access points and important features, including cultural sites and environmentally-sensitive areas. Unfortunately, as a recent study by the think-tank the Manhattan Institute indicates, there are far greater fatality, injury and environmental risks when transporting crude oil by rail than by pipeline. The industry itself acknowledges that trains have nearly three times the number of spills as pipelines (which provides little comfort given Enbridge’s oil spill record).
 
CN lacks a positive environmental record. Lakes and rivers have been polluted and fish and wildlife have been killed by CN spills of toxic products. Over 72,000 fish were killed in Illinois when CN spilled 60,000 gallons of ethanol into a tributary of the Rock and Kishwaukee rivers; fish and wildlife were killed when CN spilled 1.3 million litres of heavy bunker fuel oil and 700,000 litres of pole treating oil into Wabamun Lake, Alberta; and 500,000 fish were killed near Squamish, British Columbia when CN spilled 40,000 litres of caustic soda into the Cheakamus River. In January 2011, a CN train bound for Prince Rupert derailed close to Tete-Jaune Cache, spilling coal into the Fraser River. Unfortunately, these are just a small sample of CN spills.

As Emile Therrien, past president of the Canada Safety Council who formerly sat on the railways safety committee, recently told the Globe and Mail: “If you look at our two major railroads in Canada, they’re very unsafe.” He pointed to both lack of upgrades to track infrastructure and insufficient safety audits by the government.

Transporting tar sands to the port of either Kitimat or Prince Rupert is unprecedented and would result in the introduction of oil tanker traffic to Canada’s North Pacific coast. The risks to coastal fisheries and tourism
jobs, as well as to cultures and communities who reside there, are too great. In response to our last letter, you indicated CN has no comment or responsibility on the marine-side of shipping tar sands via the west coast.


While CN has no required legal liability, it would be unacceptable to British Columbians to assume the majority of the liability for CN’s project. On top of facilitating tar sands expansion, putting our wild salmon
rivers at risk from train derailments, and introducing oil tankers to our North Coast, extra rail traffic would also have significant impacts on moose kills, noise and air quality, and additional waits at road/rail crossings. Impacts will be felt directly by residents along the rail line.

In an article in the Financial Post in 2009, Diane Francis wrote that: “CN estimates it could ship and have the capacity to handle 2.6 million barrels a day of oil products to the West Coast if 20,000 railcars were added to its fleet.” Given the magnitude of potential rail traffic increases, CN should be required to consult with potentially impacted residents prior to approving any proposal for shipping oil by rail through BC.

In addition, opposition to Enbridge’s Northern Gateway or Kinder Morgan’s TransMountain expansion proposal from communities and First Nations across the province is likely to be extended to CN’s Pipeline-On-Rails Friends of Morice-Bulkley proposal. The Union of BC Municipalities passed a resolution last September against any expansion of oil tanker traffic to the West Coast. Several municipalities along the proposed Northern Gateway route and CN’s rail line have passed their own resolutions against oil tanker traffic introduction and expansion. Coastal First Nations have a tanker ban in place that applies to any tar sands supertankers in the North Pacific Coast. The Save the Fraser Declaration, signed by over 130 First Nations, bans the transport of tar sands through the watershed, regardless of whether done by rail or pipeline.

CN’s proposal to the west coast would be in violation of all of these legal instruments. Should CN decide to try to move forward with its proposal, it would face major opposition and risks to the company. We urge you to stop any forward movement with shipping tar sands oil by rail through British Columbia. We look forward to your reply and would be happy to meet with you in the near future if interested.

Sincerely,

Nikki Skuce, ForestEthics Advocacy
Keith Stewart, Greenpeace Canada
Gerald Amos, Friends of Wild Salmon
Shannon McPhail, Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition
Maryam Adrangi, Council of Canadians
David Lane, T.Buck Suzuki Foundation
Eric Swanson, Dogwood Initiative
Brenda Belak, West Coast Environmental Law
Caitlyn Vernon, Sierra Club of BC
Karen Wristen, Living Oceans Society
Julia Hill, Skeena Wild Conservation Trust
Ian McAllister, Pacific Wild
Murray Minchin, Douglas Channel Watch
Sven Biggs, Tanker Free BC
Dawn Remington, Friends of Morice-Bulkley
Josh DeLeenheer, Sea-to-Sands Conservation Alliance
Cc: Mr. David Maclean, Chairman of the Board of CN Rail
Don Krussel, President and CEO of Prince Rupert Port Authority
Robin Silvester, President and CEO of Port Metro Vancouver
Honourable Denis Lebel, Minister of Transport Canada
Premier Christy Clark, Leader of the BC Liberals
MLA Adrian Dix, Leader of the BC NDP
Please send reply via ForestEthics Advocacy, #350-163 West Hastings St.,
Vancouver, BC V6B 1H5

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