Justin Tang/The Canadian Press

CALGARY — The head of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers criticized the country’s environment minister Thursday for comments he said shows she is “disrespectful” of the energy industry. Catherine McKenna is wrong when she says the public needs to be protected from the oil and gas business, CAPP CEO Tim McMillan told reporters after announcing an oil production forecast through 2035 that is little changed from the one CAPP issued 12 months ago. “I’m very troubled with some of Minister McKenna’s comments,” McMillan told reporters after presenting the forecast at the Global Petroleum Show conference in Calgary. “She continues to profile our industry as if we aren’t responsible. It’s disrespectful and it’s not true ... I feel their cherry-picking of issues inside this bill to enflame Canadians and then pass that over the industry, and the bill as a whole, is disrespectful to the industry — our industry, other industries and Canadians at large.” Watch: What’s driving Canada’s oil prices? Story continues below.

The bill he’s referring to is Bill C-69, designed to overhaul the federal environmental-assessment process for major resource projects including pipelines. Earlier this week, the federal Liberals said they would accept nearly 100 amendments the Senate made to the bill but will reject dozens more. McMillan said CAPP had proposed 43 amendments it considered “essential” but only three were accepted, adding his group will continue to press for more change as the country heads for a federal election next fall.

McKenna said on Wednesday that conservative premiers, MPs and senators, as well as the oil-and-gas lobbyists, wanted a bill that would guarantee every pipeline proposed would be approved without protecting the environment. “They want us to copy and paste recommendations written by oil lobbyists that would block court challenges, that would make it easier for future governments to ignore the views of Indigenous Peoples,” she said. Industry in jeopardy? Industry reaction to the rejection of amendments has been overwhelmingly negative, with many saying the bill will still make it unlikely any new pipeline project will be proposed despite the accepted changes. “This wasn’t some Christmas wish list of our industry,” said Alex Pourbaix, CEO of oilsands producer Cenovus Energy Inc., after speaking at the show. “This was taking a bill that was really, really damaging to our industry and getting it to a place where, although it was still a real problem, it was something we felt we could live with.” In a statement Thursday, Suncor Energy Inc. CEO Mark Little said the bill “jeopardizes future development and does not restore investor confidence in our industry and country.” Tim McKay, president of Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., said in an email it would make the regulatory process more complicated, time-consuming and “legally vulnerable.”

They want us to copy and paste recommendations written by oil lobbyists that would block court challenges, that would make it easier for future governments to ignore the views of Indigenous Peoples. Environment and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna