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    Newsletter: First Nations LNG projects on the move. And much more. . . .

    Team_HydrowavBy Team_HydrowavJuly 7, 2024No Comments3 Mins Read

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    Our newsletter of 04 July 2024

    First Nations LNG projects on the move

    The biggest news: the announcement on June 25 that the Cedar LNG project, majority-owned by the Haisla Nation, will go ahead, with a target time of late 2028 for starting operations and exports.

    Crystal Smith, elected chief councillor of the Haisla: “With Cedar LNG, we have proven that Indigenous communities can successfully forge a path to economic independence and generational prosperity.”

    CEO Scott Burrows of Pembina Pipeline: “This is a historic moment, and we are proud to be moving forward with a project that will deliver industry-leading, low-carbon, cost-competitive Canadian LNG to overseas markets and contribute to global energy security, while delivering jobs and economic prosperity to the local region.”

    At the same time, the Nisga’a Nation is getting set for construction to start August 24 on the rerouted PRGT pipeline that will feed natural gas to the nation’s planned Ksi Lisims LNG plant.

    The Nisga’a Nation has held initial community information sessions about employment on the Ksi Lisims project and the pipeline.

    Photo: Woodfibre LNG floatel

    Woodfibre LNG floatel moored at site

    Though Squamish council refused a municipal permit, the B.C. government’s Environmental Assessment Office ordered Woodfibre LNG’s floating work camp to move to its government-approved site in Howe Sound.

    It did, then began taking in non-local workers, many of whom had been housed at an old (and somewhat decrepit) pulp-mill work camp.

    Woodfibre LNG pointed out that the floatel has “652 renovated guest rooms, private ensuites, and top-notch amenities.”

    It added: “Woodfibre LNG’s floatel offers a modern, comfortable living experience for our construction workforce, along with firm restrictions on access to the community — meaning workers have no impact on community infrastructure and services.”

    And: “Woodfibre LNG pays . . . the cost of catering, housekeeping, and other services on board, as part of its commitment to ensure the project has as little impact on Squamish as possible.”

    UNDRIP graphic

    Will UNDRIP be another broken promise? 

    While our newsletter naturally focuses on LNG news, we also keep an eye on some key matters affecting First Nations Peoples, such as federal and provincial adoption of UNDRIP and its principles.

    So we note this from Ken Coates at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute: “Unless a new approach is adopted, UNDRIP could turn out to be the latest in a long line of broken promises to Indigenous peoples.”

    The new chair of Parliament’s Indigenous and Northern Affairs Committee, Liberal MP Patrick Weiler of B.C., says he’s ready to hit the ground running: https://ow.ly/rx0I50SnUiN

    And Ottawa issues its third annual progress report on the implementation of UNDRIP: https://ow.ly/6hiI50Soef4

    Indigenous clean-energy news

    ALSO IN THE NEWS

    • Woodfibre LNG partners with the Squamish Nation to offer training for Squamish members to become process operators at the plant: https://ow.ly/CSnV50SpZnH
    • Woodfibre LNG took its name from the old Woodfibre pulp mill site. But for centuries before the mill was built, the site was known as Swiy̓át, a village of the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation). Learn more: https://ow.ly/ybfb50SsJMG
    • With a new bunkering vessel, Seaspan will become the first company to provide LNG bunkering (ship fuelling) in our region: https://ow.ly/HOUC50SsMAA
    • Canadian natural-gas production hit a record high in 2023, and industrial gas use continues to increase: https://ow.ly/XVzq50SqgFf
    • Global LNG trade grew by 2.1% in 2023, with 20 exporting markets and 51 importing markets: https://ow.ly/yeCr50Sq0Fe

     EVENTS

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