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Controversial bill on energy project assessment passes Senate heavily amended

Legislation overhauling Canada's assessment of major energy projects is back in the hands of Environment Minister Catherine McKenna, albeit looking a lot different than when she introduced it.

Bill C-69 is now back in the hands of the House of Commons with over 180 amendments

Environment and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna faces a much-changed Bill C-69 after the senate made over 180 amendments. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Legislation overhauling Canada's assessment of major energy projects is back in the hands of Environment Minister Catherine McKenna, albeit looking a lot different than when she introduced it.

The Senate passed the Impact Assessment Act late Thursday with more than 180 amendments.

The changes take power away from the environment minister to intervene in or slow the assessment process, reduces the ability for legal challenges of project approvals and adds more emphasis on economic considerations when deciding whether to go ahead with a particular project.

The government now has to decide which of those amendments it will accept as it tries to fulfil a 2015 campaign promise to fix Conservative-era assessment legislation the Liberals say created a broken system that blocked public participation and negated environmental concerns.

Environmental groups felt Bill C-69 originally delivered some balance between the environment and the economy as the country makes its way through a transition to a greener, cleaner energy sector.

Oil industry executives decried it as a bill that would prevent any new major energy projects from ever being built while Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said the original bill would bea nightmare for national unity.

His tone on the amended bill is less dire.

In a statement released on Thursday night, Kenney thanked the Senate for listening to Alberta's concerns and adopting amendments that included proposals from the province, the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers and the Canadian Energy Pipelines Association.

"While we believe the Senate's revised version of Bill C-69 is still problematic, we believe that it is a very significant improvement, and therefore urge the Government of Canada to allow the bill to proceed to royal assent as amended," reads the statement.

With files from CBC News