Saturday, February 27, 2016

The Malahat LNG Story....Game Over...The Wisdom of Doug White

MALAHAT LNG PROPOSAL RAISES PRE-CONFEDERATION TREATY RIGHTS AND CONSENT CONCERNS


Written by Doug White 

The Malahat First Nation and its partner Steelhead LNG announced on August 20th, 2015, a proposal to build a floating liquefied natural gas plant in Saanich Inlet at Bamberton along with an underwater supply pipeline across the Salish Sea that would cross both American and Canadian waters. Steelhead LNG has also been working toward another major LNG project with the Huu-ay-aht First Nation on the west coast of Vancouver Island at Sarita Bay on the waters of Barclay Sound and toward the entrance to Alberni Inlet. Just weeks after the Malahat LNG announcement, on October 3, 2015, the National Energy Board approved a 25-year licence for the annual export of up to six million tonnes of LNG from the Malahat LNG project.



Based on reported negative reactions from within the Malahat First Nation itself and from neighbouring First Nations, it became immediately clear that the Malahat First Nation had not engaged with or secured consent from them. Further, the NEB export licences were apparently issued without any notice or engagement with First Nations around Saanich Inlet. The proposal raises serious questions about the Pre-Confederation Treaty rights of the respective First Nations and the duty to secure consent for proposals that would interfere with those rights.

For over a century First Nations have watched with little say over land use decisions and the location of major projects that have had major impacts on their territories, rights and way of life. However, at the outset of the relationship between settlers and Indigenous Peoples on Vancouver Island, a very different relationship was created through the 14 Pre-Confederation Treaties commonly referred to as Douglas Treaties. These Treaties, and the legal principles and understandings that arose out of them starting in the early 1960s, granted recognition and respect of the Aboriginal Title interest to village sites and protection for the Indigenous way of life including hunting and fishing. Regarding the Treaties impact on provincial Crown jurisdiction, from White and Bob (SCC 1965) through Morris and Olsen (2006), it has been made clear to the provincial Crown that their jurisdiction and authority is limited and ousted by the need to protect the continuity of the rights set out in the Treaties. The federal government, for its part, must respect and uphold the treaty rights, is constrained by a fiduciary duty to safeguard the treaty protected rights, as well as a duty to diligently pursue the fulfillment of its constitutional obligations. Similar rights exist on the American side of the Salish Sea through the Stevens Treaties which led to the famous Boldt decision from the 1970s where the federal government sued the state government of Washington to uphold and protect the treaty rights to fish of their Indigenous treaty partners.......


Premier Christy Clark remains committed to LNG, notwithstanding the total collapse of global energy economics over the past year and a half. She has built her government’s political and economic agenda around its success and has encouraged a gold rush mentality and speculative approach to LNG development across the province.

 However, oil was valued well over $100/barrel in the summer of 2014 and in recent months it has been below $30/barrel and the price of much of the LNG market is indexed to the price of oil so this sudden drastic drop severely challenges LNG economics and its enormous capital costs for building plants and pipelines.

Steelhead LNG says it remains on track for the Bamberton LNG project and is continuing to pursue it. The Malahat First Nation has gone through a change in government after the resignation of former Chief Michael Harry. The new government, led by Chief Caroline Harry, recently dismissed the trustees of their Malahat Investment Corporation along with the First Nation’s chief executive officer, chief legal officer and chief financial officer.


While economic and political dynamics appear to be deeply unsettled around this proposal, what is clear in all of this is the need to approach decision making about the use of the lands and waters around the Salish Sea in ways that are consistent with the Treaty Rights and Aboriginal Title of the Indigenous Peoples that have called it home for millennia.


Doug White is an elected Councillor in Snuneymuxw First Nation, Director for Pre-Confederation Treaties and Reconciliation at Vancouver Island University.

 http://www.saanichinlet.net/blog/2016/2/27/doug-white-the-malahat-lng-story
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Who is Doug White?
  

DOUGLAS S. WHITE, B.A., J.D., is a member and former Chief of the Snuneymuxw First Nation in Nanaimo, BC. His Coast Salish name is Kwul’a’sul’tun and his Nuu-chah-nulth name is Tlii’shin. After completing his B.A. in First Nations Studies (with distinction) from Malaspina University-College, he graduated from the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria in 2006. He was called to the Bar of British Columbia in January 2008. He has been a director of the Indigenous Bar Association of Canada and an associate lawyer at Mandell Pinder. He was the elected Chief of the Snuneymuxw First Nation from December 2009 to February 2014 where a major focus of his work was in relation to the implementation of the Snuneymuxw Treaty of 1854. From June of 2010 to June 2013, he was elected by Chiefs of British Columbia to lead the First Nations Summit as a member of the FNS Task Group.

 In that capacity, he advocated for First Nations seeking resolution of outstanding issues with the Crown. In that role, he was also a member of the BC First Nations Leadership Council working on common issues with BC First Nations, particularly the Crown’s duty to consult and accommodate, and advocated on their behalf with the governments of British Columbia, Canada and internationally at the United Nations. He is currently the Director of the Centre for Pre-Confederation Treaties and Reconciliation at Vancouver Island University and practices as a lawyer and negotiator across the country for First Nations governments. He lectures frequently at universities on Indigenous legal issues. 
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8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Who is Doug White and with what authority does he write?

https://wordpress.viu.ca/cptr/author/whited2/

He knows his 5h!t.

Anonymous said...

Good article by Doug White. Hope the B.C. Lieberals take some time to read it.

Hugh said...

Non-sense from Conference Board of Canada today:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/industry-news/energy-and-resources/further-stalling-of-bc-lng-projects-threatens-annual-74-billion-gdp-boost-report-says/article28942086/

Grant G said...

Hugh....Cut n pasted from that Globe n Mail article..

________

"In 2012, Petronas acquired Progress Energy Canada, which spent an average of more than $2-billion annually with its partners from 2013 through 2015 on natural gas drilling projects in northeast B.C.

The conference board said Progress provided funding for the new study"

_____________

Did you read that?....Progress Energy paid for the study....

So, once again the LNG industry pays for media coverage...

When it comes to energy and corporate articles...There is no honest journalism in Canada's mainstream media...

Paid propaganda!

Hugh said...

Ha, I missed that.


Did you see this one:

http://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2016/02/29/Wacky-Accounting-Shale-Gas/

Grant G said...

I see everything Hugh....That conference board of Canada paid for by the LNG industry report...

Only the Globe and Mail mentioned who paid for the report...However, the Globe n Mail was very subtle about it....

Guaranteed almost no one picked up on it...Globe n Mail wouldn't dare say something like this..

The LNG report by The Conference Board of Canada was paid for and commissioned by Progress Energy..

The Globe merely said..

"The conference board said Progress provided funding for the new study"

Notice how they omitted the word Energy

That my friend is lowbrow journalism..

Sheesh

Anonymous said...

Doug White is a smart cookie who told the truth and was not re elected as top dog by the Nanaimo band.
Lot's of shit flying around ; but the Nanaimo Band seem to be having second thoughts.
He is , however, a hope that First Nations will take their proper place in society.
He has to put up with shit from both sides of the equation.

North Van's Grumps said...

Grant, you have seen this image, bottom of our page ..... Clark saying in the early days of the 2013 provincial election that:

LNG worth $30 Trillion over 30 years

http://blogborgcollective.blogspot.ca/2016/02/mla-pre-apprentice-christy-clark-with.html

That would be one trillion per year and the Prosperity Fund would be ...