Poirer said in an interview Thursday that common challenges arise in each of the three countries in which
"We would like to see permitting timelines get shorter. We would like to see one application and one review as opposed to being reviewed by multiple bodies with overlap in reviews," he said.
And he said his company would also like to see "clarity and stability and durability" of the rules applicants must follow.
Poirier said the petroleum council selected him to steer the study because of
"However, we have the benefit of drawing from best practices in
The fact that Wright gave the council five months to put together the report — work that would normally take 12 to 18 months — signals the "very high level of urgency" of the
Indeed, the report opens by saying the
"A surge in energy demand, driven by widespread electrification, the resurgence of domestic manufacturing, the proliferation of data centres and the strategic expansion of liquefied natural gas exports is colliding with aging and limited infrastructure," said the petroleum council's report.
"The country has reached the point where capacity has been expanded as much as possible. Outdated and fragmented permitting processes are increasingly unable to keep pace with these shifts, widening the gap between the infrastructure that is needed to sustain
The group's recommendations include a call for judicial reforms to avoid the kind of lengthy court battles that have slowed or ground to a halt past projects.
Poirier said the right to take such matters to court is important.
"What we've seen, however, in the
"I would apply a similar concept within the Canadian context, which is ... stakeholders and rights holders should have a right to litigate, but we'd like to see it apply to circumstances strictly where a rights holder or a stakeholder is immediately impacted by a project."
The report also flags duplication among federal agencies that each have their own separate obligations under environmental legislation, as well as overlaps with reviews at the state and local levels.
"The high degree of variability among state permitting processes — both in timeline and scope — can also introduce significant uncertainty and delay for infrastructure projects," it said.
Longer term, the petroleum council is calling for more a more standardized approach to permitting.
That could mean a central federal permitting agency for projects crossing state lines that would "site critical infrastructure systems needed to serve or advance the public interest," oversee compliance, impose conditions and grant approvals.
That's a similar concept to the recently created major projects office in
He has called that "only the first step" and said he'd like see that streamlined approach applied across the board, not just to selected projects.
Ways to enable more oil and gas infrastructure to be built in
The petroleum council report comes less than a week after the
The MOU includes measures to support construction of a new
This report by
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