The Guardian (USA)

Canadian mining giant withdraws plans for C $20bn tar sands project

- Guardian staff and agencies

A Canadian mining giant has withdrawn plans for a massive C$20.6bn ($15.7bn) tar sands mine, days before the federal government was to decide on whether to approve the controvers­ial project.

Teck Resources’ surprise decision to withdraw from open pit Frontier Mine project landed as a bombshell on Sunday night, prompting outrage from politician­s in oil-rich Alberta and cheers from environmen­tal groups.

In a letter from Teck’s chief executive, Don Lindsay, to Canada’s environmen­t minister, the company said it was “disappoint­ed to have arrived at this point”.

At full capacity, Frontier would have produced 260,000 barrels of crude oil per day, making it one of the largest in Alberta’s carbon-intensive oil sands.

While it had cleared several regulatory hurdles, oversight groups had warned the project would have adverse environmen­tal impacts.

Justin Trudeau’s government was expected to rule on the project this week as his government aims to strike a balance between Canada’s commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and support resource extraction. The decision was a complicate­d one for Trudeau, who made a 2019 election pledge to put Canada on the path to reach net zero greenhouse gas emis

sions by 2050.

Developmen­ts over recent days – including a last-minute agreement between the province of Alberta and two First Nations to address concerns over the project – suggested the mine might win approval.

But the project would have still faced hurdles. Teck had told the government that for it to build Frontier, it needed a pipeline to be built, a partner and favorable oil prices.

News of Teck’s decision to walk away from the multibilli­on-dollar project was met with frustratio­n in Alberta, where the mine was considered essential for employment and growth. Longstandi­ng unhappines­s with the government’s energy and pipeline policy cost Trudeau’s Liberals all their seats in Alberta in October’s federal election.

“The withdrawal of Teck’s Frontier Mine applicatio­n is more devastatin­g news for the Canadian economy, especially for Albertans and indigenous people,” Alberta premier, Jason

Kenney, tweeted on Sunday on the “devastatin­g” result.

In the letter explaining its decision, Teck expressed frustratio­n over Canada’s inability to balance resource extraction projects with a clear framework to address climate change.

“Global capital markets are changing rapidly and investors and customers are increasing­ly looking for jurisdicti­ons to have a framework in place that reconciles resource developmen­t and climate change, in order to produce the cleanest possible products.

“This does not yet exist here today and, unfortunat­ely, the growing debate around this issue has placed Frontier and our company squarely at the nexus of much broader issues that need to be resolved,” Lindsay wrote. “In that context, it is now evident that there is no constructi­ve path forward for the project.”

 ?? Photograph: Chris Helgren/Reuters ?? Teck Resources’ chief executive said the company was ‘disappoint­ed to have arrived at this point’.
Photograph: Chris Helgren/Reuters Teck Resources’ chief executive said the company was ‘disappoint­ed to have arrived at this point’.

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