National Post

Drought poses key risk to Canada’s LNG process

Potential for water use restrictio­ns

- Amanda Stephenson

IT IS REALLY INTERESTIN­G TO SEE, BECAUSE THIS IS THE MOMENT THE NATURAL GAS INDUSTRY HAS BEEN WAITING FOR 10 YEARS,

AND WE’VE NOW GOT ANOTHER COMPLICATI­ON.

— ANDREW BOTTERILL, DELOITTE CANADA

• Persistent drought conditions are poised to challenge natural gas producers even as they aim to ramp up in anticipati­on of Canada’s first liquefied natural gas export terminal opening, a new report warns.

The report by Deloitte Canada identifies potential water shortages in Western Canada as a key risk facing the oil and gas sector in 2024.

Some of the most extreme drought conditions currently are in northeast B.C. and northwest Alberta, a region that is the epicentre of Canada’s natural gas drilling industry.

The report notes Alberta’s government has already set up a drought advisory panel to begin water usage negotiatio­ns, while B.C. Premier

David Eby has called his province’s situation “the most dramatic drought conditions that we’ve seen.”

Water use is important for the natural gas industry — most developmen­t in Canada today involves hydraulic fracturing, a process that uses a combinatio­n of water, sand and chemicals to develop pathways to bring the gas to the surface.

And the drought comes as the industry anticipate­s increased demand for natural gas, coinciding with the expected opening sometime next year of the LNG Canada facility in Kitimat, B.C.

“It is really interestin­g to see, because this is the moment the natural gas industry has been waiting for 10 years, and we’ve now got another complicati­on,” said Andrew Botterill, national oil, gas and chemicals leader at Deloitte Canada.

The $40-billion LNG Canada project will ship liquefied natural gas overseas and open up Asian markets to Canadian natural gas for the first time. Much of the $5 billion in capital spending projected to take place in B.C. by oil and gas producers in 2024, according to the Canadian Associatio­n of

Petroleum Producers, will be driven by natural gas drilling to supply LNG Canada as the project’s completion date draws closer.

“I still think companies, especially those who have committed to putting gas volumes into a very expensive LNG plant that’s been built, will meet all of those requiremen­ts ... It’s just going to be harder work and probably will mean some extra costs around water management,” Botterill said.

In December, the Alberta Energy Regulator warned the oil and gas industry that they could face restricted access to water in the event of severe drought in 2024. The provincial government has already launched negotiatio­ns aimed at trying to get major users to reach water-sharing agreements.

Meanwhile, the B.C. Energy Regulator has provided advance warning of the potential for water restrictio­ns for industrial water licence holders if conditions deteriorat­e.

Botterill said as restrictio­ns come into place, gas developers will need to explore increased use of alternativ­e water sources.

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