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Pipe Line Contractors Disappointed by Cancellation of Energy East Pipeline Project

 October 6, 2017 - 12:39 PM EDT

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Pipe Line Contractors Disappointed by Cancellation of Energy East Pipeline Project



Pipe Line Contractors Disappointed by Cancellation of Energy East Pipeline Project

Canada NewsWire

OAKVILLE, ON, Oct. 6, 2017 /CNW/ - Members of the Pipe Line Contractors Association of Canada (PLCAC) are disappointed with the announcement by TransCanada Corporation that they will not be proceeding with the proposed Energy East Pipeline Project.

"This is very disappointing news for our association and its members," says PLCAC Executive Director, Neil Lane. "From the beginning, the PLCAC and our four union partners have been proponents of the Energy East Pipeline ensuring thousands of Canadian workers constructed this nation-building project responsibly and safely for all Canadians. The amount of time, energy, effort and good faith that has gone into the development process by the PLCAC and our union partners will now be a lost opportunity, adversely impacting thousands of jobs across Canada of those who would have built and maintained the pipeline".

Energy East was to be a 4,500-kilometre pipeline that would transport up to 1.1 million barrels of crude oil per day from Western Canada to refineries and port terminals in Quebec and New Brunswick. It is estimated that Energy East would have created more than 14,000 high-quality skilled labour jobs over the seven-year construction phase and increase Canada's GDP by approximately $55 billion.

The PLCAC co-ordinates, negotiates and administers more than a dozen collective bargaining agreements for the construction, maintenance and service of Canada's mainline and distribution pipeline systems through a national labour relations committee and a partnership-based philosophy with four international building trade unions. For over sixty years, members of the PLCAC have built and maintained the majority of the National Energy Board's 73,000 kilometers of regulated pipeline infrastructure throughout Canada.

In conclusion, Lane states "It is important to remember that pipelines continue to be the most responsible energy transportation solution and a significant contributor to Canada's economy and everyone's standard of living. The cancellation of this project will take a heavy toll on Canadian pipeline construction jobs in communities across Canada."

The Pipe Line Contractors Association of Canada (PLCAC) was founded in Edmonton in 1954, to represent Canadian pipeline contractors in labour relations matters and to develop a Canadian-based workforce with the specialized technical, trade and craft skills required for pipeline construction and maintenance.

SOURCE Pipe Line Contractor Association of Canada

View original content: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/October2017/06/c2019.html

Media Inquiries: Lianne Appleby, Associate, Communications and Member Services, 905-847-9383 Ext. 213Copyright CNW Group 2017

Source: Canada Newswire
(October 6, 2017 - 12:39 PM EDT)

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