Lexpert Special Editions

Special Edition on Energy 2016

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

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14 LEXPERT | 2016 | WWW.LEXPERT.CA Feldberg, Peter D. Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP (403) 261-5364 pfeldberg@fasken.com Mr. Feldberg is the Firm Managing Partner. He acts on all aspects of utility regulation, energy project development and First Nations matters. He acts for applicants before regulatory tribunals and at all court levels. Faille, Maxime Gowling WLG (604) 891-2733 maxime.faille@gowlingwlg.com Mr. Faille leads the firm's national Aboriginal Law Group, and acts for First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities across Canada, as well as private- sector interests seeking to do business with Aboriginal communities. Ezekiel, Ron Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP (604) 631-4708 rezekiel@fasken.com Mr. Ezekiel advises utilities, pipeline companies, independent power producers and other energy & resource clients on permitting, environmental assessments, First Nations agreements, M&A and divestitures, JVs and energy & carbon market transactions. Estep, Laura K. Dentons Canada LLP (403) 268-6308 laura.estep@dentons.com Ms. Estep assists major oil and gas companies through all stages of the regulatory process including representation before the NEB, the Alberta Utilities Commission and the Alberta Energy Regulator. She has appeared at various levels of court on energy-related appeal and judicial review matters. She also advises energy clients on land acquisition and compensation matters. Erickson, G. Frederick Stikeman Elliott LLP (403) 266-9016 ferickson@stikeman.com Mr. Erickson is a partner in Stikeman Elliott's Energy Group. He has experience in most aspects of the upstream oil and gas, NGL and LNG industries, including the purchase and sale or development of oil, gas and NGL pipelines, storage, processing and other upstream, midstream and LNG facilities. His experience includes the formation of JVs, partnerships and various synthetic ownership structures. Egan, Wayne T. WeirFoulds LLP (416) 947-5086 wegan@weirfoulds.com Mr. Egan, chair of the firm's securities practice group, provides customized legal advice to private and public energy companies on various financing and regulatory matters, including IPOs, private placements, M&As, governance and stock exchange listings. The firm's energy clients require legal expertise that extends to all corners of the world, and Mr. Egan has consistently delivered. LEXPERT-RANKED LAWYERS is mutually satisfactory. As Gitxaala demonstrates, the result of a hurried con- sultation can be a court challenge, and though it seems unlikely that Gitxaala will be appealed, many such cases find their way to the Supreme Court of Canada. Even when there's no such challenge, consultation takes time. "Very oen," Helbronner says, "the process takes much longer than [proponents] expected. But if they follow a respectful consultation process, they're much more likely to come to a mutually satisfactory conclusion." She advises that companies who are first-timers to the consultation process must not allow themselves to become bystanders, going through the motions of the regulatory process. ey should understand both the legal requirements of adequate consultation and that each affected Aboriginal group will have its own distinct interests. "e right outcome is going to be the result of a proper consultation process," Helbronner says. e negotiation of impact benefits agreements (IBAs), in which companies provide Aboriginal groups with specific training, employment, revenue-sharing or other incentives in return for contractual support of projects, has become standard operating procedure in recent years — not least of all because it helps to satisfy regulators. But Al Hudec, an Aboriginal representative with Farris, Vaughan, Wills & Murphy LLP in Vancou- ver, says IBAs aren't magic. "I would not go and offer a band a benefits package and think that that's sufficient," he warns. IBAs deal pri- marily with economic issues, while regulatory processes tend to focus on environmental concerns. But Hudec says cultural and social issues can't be glossed over in the rush to launch a project. As Gitxaala shows, every sub- stantive impact requires meaningful consultation, and Hudec emphasizes that companies have to commit to the long haul. "For lots of reasons, it can become an interminable process," he admits. Reasons include the potential for a project to affect several bands with divergent interests, disputes between elected band councils and hereditary chiefs and Indian Act requirements for council elections every two years. "Councils don't tend to have institu- tional memories," he notes, so any unfinished negotia- tion starts over every two years. e longer it takes to conclude a deal, he says, the more potential there is for - Valerie Helbronner, Torys LLP "Successful proponents are the ones who look at [consultation] from a principled perspective. It's not a check-the-box exercise."

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