Alberta and B.C. in talks for global expansion of Canadian natural gas - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:24 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Alberta and B.C. in talks for global expansion of Canadian natural gas

Premiers of Alberta and B.C. are exploring how they can help expand the reach of Canadian natural gas in global markets. Discussions for the future of international LNG took place at a conference in Vancouver this week.

According to the United Nations Paris Accords, Canada can gain carbon credits for reducing emissions abroad

There is a booth for LNG Canada in a large room lined with wooden panels. Women dressed in blue and red/green hijabs are walking past. At the center of the booth is a woman in a blue shirt and a woman in a white shirt. A panel behind the women reads,
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says the province is in talks with B.C. to expand natural gas exports at the LNG 2023 energy trade show in Vancouver. (Chris Helgren/Reuters)

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said her province has begun talks with British Columbia as part of a push to greatly expand the reach of Canadian natural gas to more foreign markets.

Speaking on the final day of the international LNG 2023 conference in Vancouver, Smith said delegates told her that many countries in Asia cannot meet emission reduction goals without natural gas, and the goal should be for Canada to fill and benefit fromthat gap.

She expressed frustration about the lack of federal infrastructure that would allow Alberta producers to fulfil global market needs.

"With the right infrastructure in place, Western Canada would become a sought-after supplier for both Asia and Europe,'' Smith told conference attendees.

"Shipping LNG from Canada's West Coast to Asia takes 11 days, compared to 20 days from the U.S. Gulf Coast.''

"With the completion of proposed projects in Atlantic Canada, shipping Western Canada's gas to Europe would take seven to eight days, and that would be less than any other North American LNG project.''

Creating interest in export infrastructure

In an attempt to spur more LNG export projects on the West Coast, Smith said she and B.C. Premier David Eby began a discussion two weeks ago to explore leveraging Article 6 of the United Nations Paris Accord, which allows Canada to gain carbon credits for reducing emissions abroad.

Smith said she wants to see Alberta and B.C. "pioneer'' a way to use Article 6 to create more interest in export infrastructure that would supply Asia with LNG, while Canadian jurisdictions gain the credits that are generated from displacing more polluting fuels such as coal in those markets.

"I feel like this is an integral part of a global strategy for emissions reduction, and I think that Alberta has an obligation as the owner of the resource in our province to take a lead making sure we build that consensus,'' Smith said.

'Have to speed that up':Eby

The massive LNG Canada facility in Kitimaton B.C.'s North Coast, whichis about 85 per cent complete, is the only such export facility under construction in Canada and is scheduled to begin delivery mid-decade. The facility is part of a$40-billion project that includes the 670-kilometre Coastal GasLink pipeline stretching from B.C.'s northeast to Kitimat.

Speaking earlier this week, Eby confirmed he was speaking with other premiers about the LNG opportunity and the awareness that there is a global demand for Canadian natural gas internationally.

However, Eby said he is "not at all confident'' that B.C. is on track to provide the necessary electricity to move the natural gas industry locally away from fossil-fuel usage, something that companies such as Malaysian energy giant Petronas mentioned as a key part of the Canadian LNG brand.

A large factory under construction with mountains in the distance.
The nearly complete LNG Canada Factory is pictured on June 14, 2023, in Kitimat, B.C. (Benot Ferradini/Radio Canada)

"It takes eight to nine years to fulfil a request from industry for the kind of electricity that they're looking for,'' Eby said. "It takes about the same time to go through the call for power all the way through to generation and transmission.

"We have to speed that up.''

Eby said a task force had been set up to do exactly that, to ensure B.C. does not miss LNG's economic opportunity.

Smith said Alberta is not stopping at talking to B.C., identifying the Yukon-Alaska corridor through Skagway, a Saskatchewan-Manitoba corridor to Churchill and possible links to James Bay in Ontario as ideas to explore.

"I'm looking at all of those options,'' she said.

"I think our best option, since we already see so many LNG projects underway with partnership of Indigenous communities, is making sure we can tie in our gas into those project lines.''