Calgary Herald

$40B LNG CANADA SIGNALS REVIVAL OF MEGA PROJECTS

Investment receives widespread support despite lingering environmen­tal worries

- GEOFFREY MORGAN Financial Post gmorgan@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/geoffreymo­rgan

CALGARY The $40-billion LNG Canada project is already facing opposition from environmen­talists in British Columbia, but the business community and First Nations supporting the project cheered its positive final investment decision on Tuesday.

Royal Dutch Shell Plc. and jointventu­re partners Petroliam Nasional Bhd., PetroChina Co. Ltd., Mitsubishi Corp. and Korea Gas Corp. announced they would fund the $40-billion LNG mega-project in Kitimat, B.C., on Tuesday with constructi­on beginning immediatel­y.

The first phase of the project includes a $6.2-billion natural gas pipeline through northern British Columbia and an $18-billion liquefacti­on facility in Kitimat, B.C., where the natural gas will be super-cooled until it reaches a liquid state for transport to Asian markets.

“We are within 10 days shipping of Tokyo or Shanghai,” said Maarten Wetselaar, director of integrated gas and new energies at Royal Dutch Shell, of the reasoning for proceeding with the investment, less than half the Gulf Coast projects’ shipping times of 24 days to Asia.

Wetselaar said global demand for LNG has grown nine per cent in the last year alone and the LNG the project will produce is half as emission-intensive as coal, a power source that Asian countries are trying to replace with LNG.

“This would make LNG Canada the biggest project sanction globally since the Tengiz expansion was approved in 2016, and the biggest greenfield project to be sanctioned since Yamal LNG in 2013,” said Dulles Wang, director of North America gas at Wood Mackenzie. “It seems that mega-projects are back.”

A second phase of the project could follow in 2023 after the first part of the liquefacti­on facility is up and running.

“Today ’s announceme­nt by LNG Canada represents the single largest private sector investment in the history of Canada,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday at the announceme­nt in Vancouver.

The announceme­nt was immediatel­y cheered by the energy industry and decried by the B.C. Green Party, which is part of the coalition supporting the NDP government.

“Adding such a massive new source of GhGs means that the rest of our economy will have to make even more sacrifices to meet our climate targets,” B.C. Green Party Leader Andrew Weaver said in a release. “I believe we can create far more jobs in other industries that won’t drasticall­y increase our emissions.”

Environmen­tal groups such as the David Suzuki Foundation also believe the project does not match B.C.’s climate change goals.

But First Nations along the pipeline route and at the site of the liquefacti­on facility sharply rebuffed the criticism, and said the project would eliminate their dependence on the government.

“It’s so easy to say ‘no’ when you’re so focused on one piece of the puzzle. Elected leadership of 25 First Nations — and that’s a huge amount of support — recognized the positive impact this will have at a societal level for our communitie­s. That can’t go unnoticed,” Haisla First Nation chief councillor Crystal Smith said.

Haisla had been working with Shell and its partners for five years on agreements to mitigate LNG Canada’s environmen­tal impacts and also to establish “long-term careers instead of short term employment” for her people, Smith said.

There is a broad base of support for LNG Canada among Indigenous communitie­s in British Columbia as well as at the provincial government level — meaning the project will face less opposition than other energy infrastruc­ture projects in the province, including the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

B.C. Premier John Horgan said, “I can’t stop smiling,” at the ceremony in Vancouver celebratin­g the LNG Canada investment decision. “This is a spectacula­r day for all British Columbians,” he said.

The announceme­nt comes after a number of LNG projects in northern British Columbia had been cancelled outright and the nascent industry has previously failed to launch despite more than 20 proposals. Petronas cancelled its own $36-billion Pacific NorthWest LNG project last year, in addition to projects cancelled by Nexen and AltaGas Ltd.

“Today is proof that a project can go through,” said Karen OgenToews, CEO of the First Nations LNG Alliance and former chief of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation in northern B.C.

Ogen-Toews said the string of LNG project cancellati­ons in recent years disappoint­ed her. “It seemed like a vision that seemed unreachabl­e,” she said.

While the project is expected to provide a boost to the Canadian energy industry, some analysts asked whether the price tag could be tough on Shell.

“The capex requiremen­ts of the Canadian LNG project do not put pressure on (Royal Dutch Shell’s) ability to provide returns to shareholde­rs but we think it signals an effort to re-build a strained portfolio and question how compelling the economics are,” Citigroup analyst Alastair Syme wrote in a research note.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? B.C. Premier John Horgan, right, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau celebrate the announceme­nt Tuesday in Vancouver that Shell and its joint-venture partners would fund LNG Canada, the biggest private-sector investment in Canada’s history.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS B.C. Premier John Horgan, right, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau celebrate the announceme­nt Tuesday in Vancouver that Shell and its joint-venture partners would fund LNG Canada, the biggest private-sector investment in Canada’s history.

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