Calgary Herald

Woodfibre LNG gets green light for exports

- IAN BICKIS

Woodfibre LNG is set to become the first liquefied natural gas export project in the country, but whether it marks the launch of a national LNG industry on a mass scale is clouded in doubt.

Canada’s export ambitions, based largely in B.C., have been hit with a series of setbacks this year. In July, Shell announced it was indefinite­ly postponing its LNG Canada project. Petronas, the Malaysian stateowned company behind Pacific NorthWest LNG, has also delayed a final investment decision.

While last week’s approval for Woodfibre LNG is positive, that export terminal didn’t face the same obstacles as some of the bigger projects, said Dirk Lever, head of research at AltaCorp Capital.

“I’m hoping it’s the start of a trend, because we really need it,” said Lever. “But I just remind myself it is a small deal.”

Of the 20 LNG proposals in B.C., Woodfibre LNG is a relatively tiny player. It is licensed to export about 2.1 million tonnes of LNG annually. In contrast, LNG Canada and Pacific NorthWest LNG would each ship roughly 10 times that amount.

Lever said while the green light for Woodfibre LNG doesn’t mean prospects have improved for other projects, it’s still good for the industry. “It tells you that somebody believes there’s a market out there,” he said.

Dulles Wang, principal Americas gas analyst at Wood Mackenzie, said another reason Woodfibre LNG is a different beast is because it’s being developed by a private company that will fund the estimated $1.6-billion cost internally rather than through debt or equity.

He said Woodfibre, owned by Singapore-based RGE Group, is also benefiting from the delays with the bigger West Coast projects and therefore will be better placed to capitalize on an expected rebound in LNG prices and Asian demand over the next decade.

“You are seeing some difficulti­es with the bigger projects, so the smaller projects, if it can move and if it can take advantage of the markets in the early 2020s, then the timing I think is right,” said Wang.

He said the larger developmen­ts have also faced greater resistance because of potential emissions and ecological effects, not to mention the bottom line. “These large-scale Canadian projects are still high cost,” said Wang.

Hilary Novik, an analyst at the Eurasia Group, said the regulatory process in Canada is drawn-out, discouragi­ng investment. “The onerous permits, and the onerous permitting process, had kind of scared investors away,” she said.

Novik doesn’t expect Petronas to cancel Pacific NorthWest LNG, but she does see a greater risk that a final decision is put off until late next year or early 2018, putting production into the next decade.

“We think Canada has really missed the window of their LNG opportunit­y, at least in the near to medium term,” she said.

“We expect broader export potential to remain unrealized until the end of the decade.

“For now it’s definitely a more gloomy, bleak environmen­t for global LNG.”

I’m hoping it’s the start of a trend, because we really need it. But I just remind myself it is a small deal.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? B.C. Premier Christy Clark greets workers at the Woodfibre LNG project site near Squamish, B.C., on Friday.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS B.C. Premier Christy Clark greets workers at the Woodfibre LNG project site near Squamish, B.C., on Friday.

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