Vancouver Sun

B.C.’s snoozing while others realize our dream of LNG exports

Kenneth Green and Taylor Jackson wonder if province will ever make any progress

- Kenneth Green is the senior director and Taylor Jackson is a policy analyst in natural resource studies at the Fraser Institute.

Amid a global glut of natural gas and implacable opposition from environmen­talists and some First Nations leaders, B.C.’s dream of exporting liquefied natural gas to world markets is at risk of becoming a pipe dream.

New warnings about Canada’s waning potential to export LNG are coming from some surprising places. We are accustomed to hearing these warnings from energy companies, thinktanks, industry associatio­ns and Canadian politician­s. But recently, Japan’s ambassador to Canada said Canada is running out of time if it hopes to supply Japan with LNG. Japan wants LNG to comprise 27 per cent of its energy mix by 2030. The ambassador’s warning comes just days after Canada’s federal environmen­t minister announced yet another three-month delay in the regulatory approval process for Pacific NorthWest LNG. The process has now taken more than 750 days. It was initially supposed to last only a year.

The Pacific NorthWest LNG facility is seen as the front-runner among more than 20 proposed LNG projects in B.C. Indeed, an increasing number of other proposed LNG projects in the province, such as the AltaGas-led Douglas Channel LNG project and Royal Dutch Shell’s project, are being delayed and shelved.

Consider some of the recent policy announceme­nts regarding LNG. In January, the federal government announced it will require LNG terminal environmen­tal reviews to consider both the direct and upstream greenhouse gas

Japan’s ambassador to Canada said Canada is running out of time if it hopes to supply Japan with LNG.

emissions of these projects. Details as to what this means, of course, will be announced at some later date.

These new climate tests will only add to the regulatory barriers and compliance costs Canadian energy companies already face, compoundin­g the effects that low energy prices already have on the industry.

And non-developmen­t will also come with substantia­l economic costs. A recent Fraser Institute study found the cost of delay imposed upon LNG investment­s in B.C., defined as export revenues forgone, is substantia­l at $22.5 billion per year in 2020, rising to $24.8 billion per year in 2025. Even if sales were cut in half, the losses would still be significan­t, totalling about five per cent of B.C.’s 2014 GDP.

The National Energy Board’s recent Canada’s Energy Future 2016 report also shed some light on what LNG means for Canada’s natural gas industry. In a scenario where no LNG exports occur between 2015 and 2040, Canadian natural gas production might only experience two per cent growth compared to 19 per cent growth in a scenario with LNG exports.

Finally, it’s ironic that the climate tests will only focus on direct and upstream emissions from LNG facilities, and won’t capture the potential climate benefits associated with using natural gas for electricit­y in places like the Asia Pacific, which was responsibl­e for more than 70 per cent of global coal consumptio­n in 2014.

Increasing­ly, it looks like B.C. may miss out on supplying LNG to Asian and global markets, forgoing private and public economic gains that could improve the lives of British Columbians and all Canadians. Others, however, including Australia and the United States, are eager to satisfy that demand. Let’s hope things don’t turn out that way.

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