nergie Saguenay vows to be world's cleanest liquid natural gas plant
Proponents for pipeline and refinery project believe impact on endangered belugas can be minimized
The proponents of a $9-billion project to pipe natural gas to the Saguenayregion, where it would be transformed and exported worldwide by ship, say they're confident they can do that without harming the environment including endangered beluga whales.
Gazoduc Inc., which is proposing to constructa750-kilometre pipeline from northern Ontario to Saguenay, and GNL-Qubec, which would build the refinery, presentedtheir 1,100-page environmental impact study to the federal and provincial governments this week.
"At this point, we are focusing on determining the route," said Marie-Christine Demers, the director of public affairs and community relations for Gazoduc.
While that's still under discussion, she said, it's unclear what the impact of the project would be on municipalities and Indigenous communities.
"We will definitely avoid all the sensitive areas, but we are gathering comments."
GNL-Qubec has said it aims to buildthe cleanest refinery in the world transforming natural gas to liquid with hydro-electricity instead of burning natural gas, in order to reduce its carbon footprint.
StphanieFortin, the director of communications forGNL-Quebec,said the companyhopes to start constructionof the refinery in 2021 and be operational by2025.
Fortin said thegoal is to ship 11 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas every year the contents of three to four tankersper week.
Protecting endangered belugas
The tankersare about the size of the RMS Queen Mary 2 which, at345 metres in length, is about four times as long as the regular whale-watching cruise ships that now plythe fjord.
Fortinsaid the environmental impact study specifically addresses how the nergie Saguenay project wouldlimit harmful effects on the area's endangered beluga population.
"We are convinced we're in a position to put measures in place to have a project that will harmoniously integrate into the area," Fortin said.
Fortin said the main mitigation measure would be toreduce the speed of the tankers, toprevent collisions and also to reduce the underwater sound pollution.
Noise causes a lot of stress to the endangered belugas, said Robert Michaud, director of the Group for Research and Education on Marine Mammals (GREMM), based in Tadoussac, Que.
In an interview with Radio-Canada last month, Michaud urged a go-slow approach.
"There are still a lot of unanswered questions on the table," he cautioned."Perhaps we should find the answers before going forward."
He said there has been a steep increase in the number of deaths of pregnant female belugas and their calvesin the last decade, so it's especially important to preserve their environment and avoid putting more stress on them.
Now in government hands
Quebec Environment Minister Benoit Charette said the information in the environmental impact study still needs to be reviewed by the government, and he's withholding judgment on the project until then.
"The process is in the early stages," he said.
The impact study, which runs to 5,000 pages including the annexes, has also been tabled with the federal Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency. It, too, will review the study before determining whether the project's proponents need to go back to the drawing board.
With files from Catou MacKinnon, Glenn Wanamaker and Radio-Canada