As Some Canadian LNG Projects Advance, More Are Poised to Lose Export Licenses
A majority of stalled LNG projects in Canada are poised to lose their natural gas export licenses by 2026, according to the country’s energy regulator.
A majority of stalled LNG projects in Canada are poised to lose their natural gas export licenses by 2026, according to the country’s energy regulator.
The Nisga’a Nation and Western LNG are working to amend the route of their Prince Rupert Gas Transmission (PRGT) project in British Columbia (BC) as early site work begins this month.
The Biden administration’s pause on LNG export licenses may have opened the door for competing projects in Canada to gain ground after years of lagging behind.
The development team behind Ksi Lisims LNG in British Columbia (BC) has inked a long-term sales and purchase agreement (SPA) with Shell plc as the supermajor looks to grow its collection of western Canadian volumes for the Asian market.
Canada’s largest natural gas producer, Tourmaline Oil Corp., disclosed it plans to acquire Bonavista Energy Corp. as it looks to add “decades of inventory” to its existing Deep Basin assets in Alberta, according to the firm.
The Alberta and British Columbia (BC) governments have set out to gain formal, international greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction credits for exporting LNG as a replacement for coal and oil in other countries.
Kansas-based Black & Veatch has been awarded an engineering contract with the Ksi Lisims LNG export project proposed for the northern Pacific coast of British Columbia (BC).
The Ksi Lisims LNG export project, proposed to move 12 million metric tons/year of natural gas to overseas markets from the west coast of British Columbia (BC), can achieve a net-zero carbon goal by 2030, sponsors promised in a letter to provincial authorities.
The Ksi Lisims LNG export project backed by natives and proposed for Canada’s northern Pacific coast has cleared its second regulatory hurdle by qualifying for a British Columbia (BC) government approval process.
The native-led Ksi Lisims LNG project has cleared an initial regulatory hurdle by obtaining a 40-year natural gas export license for its planned terminal near Prince Rupert on the northern Pacific coast of British Columbia (BC).