Morneau also told a news conference that if Kinder Morgan
decided to walk away from the project, which the provincial
government of British Columbia opposes, the indemnification
would stay in place in case another company took over.
"We are willing to indemnify the Trans Mountain expansion
against unnecessary delays that are politically motivated,"
Morneau said.
Although the federal government has approved the pipeline that
would carry Alberta crude to the Pacific coast, the project
faces opposition in British Columbia, as well as from
environmentalists and some indigenous groups.
Morneau said the indemnification would allow the project to move
forward. Kinder Morgan Canada has given the government a
deadline of May 31 to provide the assurances the company needs
to go ahead.
Morneau said he was confident that Ottawa could come to an
agreement with Kinder Morgan Canada that was fair for
shareholders and Canadian taxpayers.
(Reporting by David Ljunggren and Leah Schnurr; editing by Chizu
Nomiyama and Jonathan Oatis)
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