The Province

40-year LNG licence OK’d for B.C. deal

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The board that regulates natural-gas exploratio­n and production in Canada has approved its first 40-year export licence to a jointventu­re firm led by Shell.

The National Energy Board permit will allow LNG Canada to export up to 1,494 billion cubic metres of liquefied natural gas from a terminal that will be located near Kitimat.

Until the National Energy Board Act was amended in June 2015, the maximum term length of an export permit was 25 years.

The licence must still be approved by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet.

The announceme­nt comes just days after the B.C. Oil and Gas Commission approved an LNG Canada facility permit. Shell Canada Energy and affiliates of PetroChina, Korea Gas Corp. and Mitsubishi Corp. are members of LNG Canada, which hasn’t yet made a final investment decision on the project.

“We have determined that the quantity of natural gas proposed to be exported by LNG Canada, for a term of 40 years, is surplus to Canadian needs,” says a letter published Thursday by the board. “The board is satisfied that the natural-gas resource base in Canada, as well as North America overall, is large and can accommodat­e reasonably foreseeabl­e Canadian demand, including the natural-gas exports proposed in this applicatio­n, and a plausible potential increase in demand.”

The board says in its letter that the licence will expire Dec. 31, 2022, unless exports have begun. The project is one of 20 LNG proposals in B.C. Four have received environmen­tal approval from the province, while two have been granted permission to proceed by the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency.

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