Times Colonist

First Nation, LNG partners file project descriptio­n for new northern B.C. project

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CALGARY — A liquefied natural gas project being proposed in a northern B.C. First Nation could soon produce millions of tons of the resource per year.

A Calgary-based group of LNG companies called Rockies LNG and Texas-based Western LNG say the project in the Nisga’a Nation could have an economic impact of $55 billion over the next 30 years. The group filed a project descriptio­n notice with the B.C. and federal government­s as part of the first phase of the project, with ongoing stakeholde­r consultati­on expected.

The project, called Ksi Lisims LNG after the Nisga’a name for the Nass River, is being touted as a low-cost source of LNG, which will also serve to economical­ly support the First Nation.

Two gas pipeline projects have received regulatory approval and are being evaluated for the site.

“Attracting an economic base to the Nass Valley has long been a priority for the Nisga’a Nation,” said Nisga’a Nation President Eva Clayton.

“This is why, for close to a decade, our Nation has worked to attract a world-leading LNG project to our treaty lands, and why we are proud to commence the formal regulatory process for our project, Ksi Lisims LNG.”

The group anticipate­s commercial operation will start in late 2027 or 2028, and the facility will be designed to produce up to 12 million tonnes of LNG per year and receive approximat­ely 1.7 to 2.0 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day.

Rockies LNG say LNG has a relatively low carbon impact, and the use of LNG from the Ksi Lisims would reduce emissions by more than 45 million tonnes per year over a 30-year period when compared with using the same amount oil or coal.

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