Times Colonist

Premier boasts LNG will lead B.C. past Alta. on energy front

- BRUCE CHEADLE

OTTAWA — Premier Christy Clark is projecting British Columbia will rival energy giant Alberta in terms of “contributi­on to Canada” once the province starts exporting liquefied natural gas to Asia.

Clark was preaching the gospel of natural gas exports Monday in Ottawa with a large delegation that included about two dozen energy industry business people and three First Nations leaders.

“We have a chance in British Columbia to do as much or more for the country as Alberta has done,” Clark said of the province’s energy export potential.

“We should all be very proud of what Alberta’s contribute­d to Canada. We have our chance in B.C. now to make a similar sized contributi­on to Confederat­ion, and we want to do it.”

However, no final investment deals have been signed and Clark could not predict whether any will be completed this year.

The latest B.C. budget didn’t project revenues from liquefied natural gas for the next three years.

Greg Rickford, the federal natural resources minister, told the House of Commons the Conservati­ve government approved four long-term LNG export licences for B.C. last week.

“The growing demand for natural gas makes Asia an ideal place for diversifyi­ng our energy markets,” Rickford told the House as Clark watched from the visitor’s gallery.

“Estimates suggest that the natural gas sector could create 54,000 jobs per year between 2012 and 2035 in British Columbia.”

The B.C. government used the Ottawa visit to sign accords with the federal government on skills training and immigratio­n — preparatio­n, says Clark, for a potentiall­y inflationa­ry labour shortage in her province.

The premier is predicting B.C.’s LNG industry will soon compete for workers with Alberta’s oilpatch and Saskatchew­an’s potash industry.

“What we want to do is come up with a national strategy — particular­ly for British Columbia, but for all of the country — that will mean we don’t experience the wage inflation that we are likely to see if we don’t address these [labour] issues,” Clark told a news conference on Parliament Hill.

“And we can’t build an industry in our province or in this country if … we see huge wage inflation.”

A big increase in the number of temporary foreign workers permitted into Canada has raised concerns that employers are using cheap foreign labour to undermine Canadian wages.

By the end of 2012, the number of temporary workers was estimated to have doubled in seven years to about 340,000.

 ??  ?? B.C. Premier Christy Clark speaks to Green party Leader Elizabeth May, MP for Saanich-Gulf Islands, in the foyer of the House of Commons in Ottawa on Monday.
B.C. Premier Christy Clark speaks to Green party Leader Elizabeth May, MP for Saanich-Gulf Islands, in the foyer of the House of Commons in Ottawa on Monday.

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