Feds urged to follow U.S. lead on permitting reform; Wilkinson ‘won’t cut corners’
WASHINGTON — It may not sound like the stuff of a taut political thriller, but permitting reform — streamlining the drawn-out approval process for energy projects — has been a key plot point in Washington’s latest debt-ceiling drama.
On Tuesday, Canada introduced some intrigue of its own.
Industry leaders say it’s vital that Ottawa, which claimed just last month to have a more efficient regime, keeps up with the U.S., where a dramatic new permitting overhaul could soon become law.
“It’s clearly a race that’s become a sprint,” said Andrew McLaughlin, general counsel and vice-president of legal affairs for Major Drilling, a multinational mining services company in Moncton, N.B.


