Resource World Magazine

Resource World - Aug-Sept 2015 - Vol 13 Iss 5

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a u g u s t / s e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 5 www.resourceworld.com 51 aside their political differences and negotiate common sense business agreements that will both satisfy environmental concerns and yet still see Aboriginal communities benefit? Is it possible to create an Aboriginal Pipeline Group(s) similar to what was structured in the Northwest Territories by the Inuvialuit, Sahtu, and Gwich'in communities along the Mackenzie Valley route? In that agreement, which was signed on June 19, 2003, the Aboriginal Pipeline Group and TransCanada signed an agreement giving the Aboriginal groups of the Northwest Territories a one- third ownership of the pipeline project. Based on past history of negotiations between First Nations along the proposed BC pipeline routes, it seems unlikely that any collaborative agreement can be reached without some kind of mediation/negotia- tion process involving an independent third party who is not representing either gov- ernment or industry. If LNG and/or oil are to flow in any geographical direction across Canada, then a group that will be trusted by the affected Nations and industry needs to establish a dialogue between all of them along the pipeline routes to the Northwest coast of British Columbia, the US border and the east coast of Canada. Some people have recently pointed to Chief Clarence Louie and his new Aboriginal Strategy Group LLP as a potential leader of such a process. When we asked the Chief about this he replied in his typically pragmatic way, "If we don't stop fighting amongst ourselves these opportunities will pass us by. We don't have to agree on where our territories begin and end, we just need to get together, form our own companies and negotiate a bigger piece of the pie so we'll all benefit. Aside from the obvious environ- mental concerns that need to be addressed, how damn hard can it be to sit the business leaders of these communities down and agree on a royalty formula with industry?" We hope someone like Chief Louie can help the communities along these pipeline routes to come to a business arrangement soon or maybe Canada as a whole will lose out economically. n

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