B.C. Supreme Court hearings begin for legal challenges to LNG pipeline project

Protesters opposed to fracking and liquefied natural gas march to the LNG conference in Vancouver, on Friday May 23, 2014. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

VANCOUVER - A Gitxsan Nation hereditary chief is challenging the B.C. government's decision to allow a pipeline to go through what he calls "pristine wilderness," on the strength of a 12-year-old environmental review, while disregarding traditional Gitxsan governance by declining to attend feast hall meetings.

The B.C. Supreme Court is set to weigh in on two petitions filed over the provincial government's decision last year to deem the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission pipeline "substantially started," meaning it wouldn't need a new environmental assessment.

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