
Why LNG Canada could be B.C.’s last kick at the liquefied natural gas can
The Kitimat liquefaction facility at the end of the contested Coastal GasLink pipeline will be...
Liquefied natural gas, or LNG, is natural gas that has been cooled to below 160 degrees Celsius, compressed and turned into a liquid for transport. In British Columbia, where there is abundant natural gas, the provincial government is seeking investment by companies to develop an LNG export industry to feed a growing Asian market.
The prospect of developing an LNG industry in B.C. has been controversial because natural gas in the province is developed via hydraulic fracturing or fracking. Fracking uses significant amounts of water, often mixed with chemicals, and has been shown to induce earthquakes. Some First Nations have voiced concerns about further scaling up fracking in their territories.
Developing an LNG industry presents major challenges to meeting B.C.’s climate targets. In addition to emissions from extracting natural gas, cooling gas into a liquid for export requires running large compression units 24/7. Most plants plan to fuel their compressor units with natural gas, creating additional greenhouse gas emissions in the process.
The LNG Canada project, given the green light by investors in October 2018, will produce 9.6 megatonnes of carbon per year by 2050, according to the Pembina Institute. By 2050, B.C.’s legislated target for total carbon pollution is 13 megatonnes a year.
The Kitimat liquefaction facility at the end of the contested Coastal GasLink pipeline will be...
RCMP tear down Gitxsan rail blockade in New Hazelton, B.C., while people across Canada organize...
Elders, legal observers and media have been detained as police advance into Gidimt’en territory where...
When the pipeline company failed to act on an immediate evacuation order, land defenders decommissioned...
A new analysis shows the climate plans of eight Canadian oil and gas producers are...
Environmental groups say while the province has made important gains in new roadmap, it’s still...
If governments, including Canada’s, are serious about preventing global temperatures from rising more than 1.5...
After TC Energy cleared an archaeological site, armed with permits issued by the province, Gidimt’en...
Hunters, fishers and naturalists have united in a bid to prevent the B.C. town from...
The final resting place of Canada’s most radioactive nuclear waste could be a cave about as deep below the surface as the CN Tower is...
Continue readingPeople always tell us they love our newsletter. Find out yourself with a weekly dose of our ad‑free, independent journalism