Houston Chronicle Sunday

Chevron may go all-electric with Canada LNG facility

- By Natalie Obiko Pearson

Chevron is seeking approval to modify its plans for a liquefied natural gas export facility on Canada’s Pacific Coast to an all-electric design that it says will result in the lowest greenhouse gas emissions per ton of LNG of any large project in the world.

Chevron and its partner Woodside Petroleum Ltd. earlier this year had announced they’d applied to expand the capacity of their LNG project in Kitimat, British Columbia, by as much as 80 percent to 18 million metric tons a year.

That triggered a new federal screening of the project that’s expected to “commence shortly,” according to a July 8 letter filed by Chevron to the provincial environmen­tal assessment office.

As part of the fresh round of approvals sought, the project is proposing to become an “all-electric plant” powered by hydroelect­ricity, allowing expanded capacity without the correspond­ing increase in emissions of a traditiona­l LNG facility, the letter said.

LNG is created by cooling gas to minus 260 degrees Fahrenheit in an energy-intensive process typically powered by burning natural gas.

Kitimat LNG instead proposes electric motor drives totaling 700 megawatts to run all liquefacti­on, utility compressor­s, pumps and fans with hydropower bought from the provincial utility, according to its revised project descriptio­n dated July 8.

It will have backup diesel power generators onsite for emergencie­s.

The proposed plant “will achieve the lowest emissions intensity of any large-scale LNG facility in the world,” according to the project descriptio­n.

Kitimat LNG will produce less than 0.1 ton of carbon dioxide equivalent for every ton of

LNG compared with a global average of more than 0.3 ton of carbon dioxide equivalent, according to the document.

Chevron and Woodside expect to make a final investment decision between 2022 and 2023 with production starting by 2029, according to the project descriptio­n. The revised proposal may trigger the need for a federal environmen­tal assessment, according to the document.

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