Vancouver Sun

Climate activists want B.C. to abandon LNG projects

Open letter to province says proposals don't align with global warming fight

- TIFFANY CRAWFORD ticrawford@postmedia.com — with files from The Canadian Press and David Carrigg

A large group of climate-action organizati­ons is calling on the B.C. government to halt plans to expand liquefied natural gas production because of climate change.

In an open letter Wednesday to Premier David Eby and the energy and environmen­t ministers, 88 groups argue that plans for five new LNG plants in B.C. do not align with global efforts to limit global warming to 1.5 C or to transition away from fossil fuels as agreed upon in the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Some of the Canadian groups include the B.C. Wilderness Committee, Stand Earth, Greenpeace Canada, Council of Canadians, and Environmen­tal Defence Canada. Several environmen­tal groups from Washington state, Japan, South Korea and Indonesia have also signed the letter.

The letter contends that while U.S. President Joe Biden has paused approvals of LNG terminals, B.C. is allowing environmen­tal reviews for the Ksi Lisims and Tilbury LNG projects to proceed without full considerat­ion of the climate effects. The province also recently approved Cedar LNG, while Woodfibre LNG and LNG Canada are under constructi­on.

“Together these projects amount to nearly 50 million tonnes of proposed LNG exports and 30 megatonnes of greenhouse gas emissions in B.C. every year until long after the world needs to stop burning fossil fuels,” the letter states.

The groups argue that even if emissions are mitigated by using electricit­y from B.C. Hydro to power the liquefacti­on plants, the province would need more than eight new Site C dams' worth of additional generation and transmissi­on lines to these LNG plants.

“Gas is not a solution to climate change nor does it have any role to play in the global effort to reach net-zero emissions by 2050,” the letter states. “LNG will only prolong reliance on fossil fuels and make that commitment unattainab­le.”

On Friday, RBC Capital Markets said it expects Pembina Pipeline Corp. and its partner, the Haisla Nation of B.C., to green light the Cedar LNG project in Kitimat with a final investment decision soon.

The Woodfibre LNG project in Squamish has been approved by the federal and provincial government­s as well as the Squamish Nation.

A wrinkle in the project timeline has appeared, however, with the District of Squamish needing to give the go-ahead to the floating hotel to accommodat­e workers.

In January, a spokespers­on for LNG Canada said a reliable source of responsibl­y produced energy should never be taken for granted.

“Canada's lower carbon LNG will provide security of supply for global markets that can rely on our country's natural gas reserves to advance their economies and reduce global GHG emissions, as natural gas replaces higher emitting sources of energy such as coal.

With strong Indigenous participat­ion and leadership, we feel that's a very attractive value propositio­n,” LNG Canada said in the statement provided to Postmedia.

The province maintains the industry continues to provide economic benefits, such as jobs and skills training, new economic opportunit­ies for First Nations, and tax and royalty benefits for B.C.

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