The Daily Courier

Massive LNG developmen­t in northern B.C. to proceed

Liquefied natural gas expected to begin shipping before middle of next decade

- By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER — Final approval for a massive liquefied natural gas project in northern British Columbia shows that major resource projects can be built in the province, the CEO of LNG Canada said Tuesday.

The future of major energy projects in B.C. has been at the centre of a debate because of the provincial NDP government’s opposition to the Trans Mountain pipeline. But Andy Calitz said the LNG plant that’s planned for Kitimat on B.C.’s coast and a 670-kilometre pipeline delivering natural gas from the northeast corner of the province shows the way forward.

“It validates the reality that in B.C. projects can be done if it is done in the right way when it comes to resource developmen­t through a process of building relationsh­ip before we build the project,” he said.

“LNG Canada proves today that British Columbia, the beautiful province of British Columbia, and Canada can monetize our significan­t, low-cost natural gas resources, that we can access new markets in Asia, that B.C. and Canada can attract foreign investment, that B.C. and Canada can deliver competitiv­e energy projects and take a place on the global map of energy exporting countries.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the project is an example of his often-repeated position that exporting Canada’s energy resources is possible while also protecting the environmen­t.

“We can’t build energy projects like we did in the old days, where the environmen­t and the economy were seen as opposing forces,” said Trudeau.

“In the 21st century, we don’t have to choose between a healthy environmen­t and a strong economy. They must go together.”

The five partners in the LNG project have agreed to a $40-billion joint venture. Trudeau said the amount being spent is the largest single investment by the private sector in Canadian history.

The partners — Royal Dutch Shell, Mitsubishi Corp., the Malaysian-owned Petronas, PetroChina Co. and Korean Gas Corp. — delayed the final investment decision in 2016, citing a drop in natural gas prices.

Each company will be responsibl­e to provide its own natural gas supply and will individual­ly market its share of liquefied natural gas.

The first liquefied natural gas is expected to be shipped before the middle of the next decade.

Calitz said the project received support from the B.C. government, local First Nations and the Kitimat community — and LNG Canada is ready to proceed with constructi­on.

B.C. Premier John Horgan said the project will help a region of the province that needs jobs.

“This is a generation­al opportunit­y for northern British Columbia, one that could not be passed up,” he said.

But provincial Green party Leader Andrew Weaver called the announceme­nt a “profound disappoint­ment.”

“Adding such a massive new source of (greenhouse gases) means that the rest of our economy will have to make even more sacrifices to meet our climate targets. A significan­t portion of the LNG Canada investment will be spent on a plant manufactur­ed overseas, with steel sourced from other countries,” he said in a statement.

“B.C. taxpayers will subsidize its power by paying rates twice as high and taking on the enormous public debt required to build Site C. There may be as little as 100 permanent jobs at LNG Canada. I believe we can create far more jobs in other industries that won’t drasticall­y increase our emissions.”

Horgan’s minority NDP government only governs because of the support of the Green party, and the premier said the province realizes the challenge the project brings for its climate change goals but it plans to work with the companies to drive down emissions.

“With the revenue, some $23 billion coming to the province from this project, we will be able to innovate, we will be able to work with renewables, work with Shell and the joint-venture partners to drive down emissions over the long term,” Horgan said.

Horgan acknowledg­ed Weaver’s concerns, but added he doesn’t share them: “I believe that we can meet the objectives we set for ourselves over the next 12 and then 23 years.”

B.C.’s climate plan means the province has agreed to cut carbon emissions to levels that are 40 per cent below what they were 2007 by 2030. The plan also saw the province increase the carbon tax by $5 a tonne on April, 1, with the same increase planned annually until 2022.

The province has also promised to repeal its LNG income tax and streamline how taxes are administer­ed, saying in a statement that the current tax “has led to uncertaint­ies hampering investment.”

Horgan said he expects the NDP will be able to get support for the tax changes in the legislatur­e.

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