The Prince George Citizen

Natural Resources Forum bringing heavy hitters

- Frank PEEBLES Citizen staff fpeebles@pgcitizen.ca MORRIS

The issues concerning natural resources are too important for partisansh­ip, said the man who has hosted the province’s annual conversati­on on those topics.

Mike Morris, the B.C. Liberal MLA for Prince George-Mackenzie, has always created the yearly B.C. Natural Resources Forum agenda from the position of government (as did his predecesso­r Pat Bell who initiated it). When the NDP took the position of government following the last election, there was wondering about how Morris would handle the new situation, and likewise how the new government would respond.

The answer is at hand. This year’s edition of the B.C. Natural Resources Forum is loaded with provincial ministers and a speech from premier John Horgan. It is also sprinkled with opposition members, public sector figures and private business interests – all of them heavy hitters in their various fields of expertise.

“There was a lot of concern that partisansh­ip would show through, but this has never been an event that was funded by the B.C. Liberal Party or by government,” said Morris. “We hired C3 Alliance Corporatio­n awhile back to be the event coordinato­r, handle the logistics, just so it never took on that tone. This office has always been the host, and we continue to be, but we have always put the conversati­on first. This event is about developing partnershi­ps, bringing out the best informatio­n, advancing the knowledge and understand­ing of our bread-and-butter industries, and this year is the demonstrat­ion to all the skateholde­rs that this is a resources forum not a political exercise. It is about the economic tools of British Columbia and how we best use them together. It’s about bringing opportunit­ies to life. There has been a lot of pressure over the years to bring this event to the Lower Mainland but it rightly should be here where the natural resources we’re talking about are right at hand, where all the road and rail networks come together, where the runways and telecommun­ications systems come together. Prince George is the centre of all the natural resource action. We are the crossroads of all those sectors.”

There is no one sector that most inspires Morris. He is looking forward most to hearing the points of view of stakeholde­rs the forum has never experience­d before, like federal Minister of Natural Resources James Carr and National Chief Perry Bellegarde of the Assembly of First Nations.

“We have always tried to be diverse in the tropics on the schedule,” Morris said. “B.C. is noted, almost more than any other province can say, for having a diverse economy, and it is even diverse within the natural resources sectors.”

Although he naturally has partisan positions on how the coming year may play out with the NDP-Green coalition holding governance power, Morris is most interested within the walls of the B.C. Natural Resources Forum in how developmen­t opportunit­ies come to fruition and how that conversati­on flows.

In particular, he is interested in the Summit LNG proposal and how that idea of a natural gas refinery plant in Prince George might be progressin­g. He is interested in possible synergy arrangemen­ts that might help multiple ideas come to fruition by working together, like the Eagle Spirit pipeline concept and entreprene­ur David Black’s suggestion of an oil refinery in B.C. He is interested in hearing voices on the adventure tourism industry that in his mind has wild potential for the Prince George area.

“We have no petrochemi­cal industry in northern B.C., and now there is a huge opportunit­y just sitting there, because we have the raw material, we just need to have the processing facilities to turn these derivative­s of the petroleum products right here in our region into polypropyl­ene and products like that,” he said. “This forum exists to bring the players into the same room who can turn our natural resources into economic activity and opportunit­ies for northern British Columbians, and all Canadians.”

The B.C. Natural Resources Forum offers a set of panel discussion­s, a number of meet-and-greet opportunit­ies and business-to-business meetings, a set of government officials germane to the natural resource portfolios, and a trade show where businesses in these fields can showcase themselves to the public and to industry stakeholde­rs.

It runs Tuesday to Thursday at the Prince George Civic Centre.

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