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LNG – Through a gas darkly – Part 2

Wednesday, June 11, 2014 @ 3:45 AM

By Peter Ewart

As discussed in Part 1 of this series, Premier Christy Clark has emphasized that the province is making all of its decisions “through the lens of whether or not it furthers our purpose in creating an LNG industry here in BC,” and that  LNG is the government’s “central preoccupation.”

Part 1 also highlighted how this natural gas / LNG lens was being used to make dramatic changes to post-secondary training and apprenticeship in the province.  But there are other dramatic changes as well.

For example, in March 2014, the BC government pushed through Bill 4, the Parks Amendment Act.  This Act will open the door to the further penetration of BC parks by natural gas and other industrial interests.  As Al Martin of the B.C. Wildlife Federation has commented, “The government has sent a clear signal that it is open to having pipelines cut through our globally renowned protected areas.  The Act will now allow industrial expansion in some of B.C.’s most beloved parks, placing them at risk” (Linnett, Carol. DeSmog Canada, March 25, 2014).  To make things worse, these same private interests will be put in charge of any public consultation about the removal of this land from BC parks.

Then there is the controversy over Bill 24 and the Agricultural Land Reserve in the Interior and North of the province.  Bill 24, which was barrelled through the provincial legislature after raucous debate, will make it easier for farm and ranch land to be removed from the ALR for industrial development.  This development could include “fracking, mining, diversion of water for oil and gas, and other invasive activities” (CommonsBC, June 8, 2014).

Unfortunately, some of these natural gas / LNG related decisions are taking place behind closed doors or unleashed on the public at the last minute.  This is what happened to the Fort Nelson First Nation band in the midst of a conference on LNG on its territory.  Unbeknownst to the band, the provincial government, while its government officials smiled and toured the land, was quietly passing an order-in-council eliminating environmental assessments for sweet gas plants.  Because of swift action by the Band leadership, the government was forced to back down in humiliation.  Nonetheless, the BC government’s obsession with changing everything in the province, by hook or crook, to facilitate the natural gas / LNG industry was revealed for all to see.

It is also revealed in the arbitrary way in which privileges are hand out to the natural gas / LNG sector.  For example, BC Hydro was blocked from burning natural gas at its Burrard Thermal Generating Station under the 2010 Clean Air Act, which resulted in the closure of that back-up facility.  At the same time, an exemption to the Act has been granted to LNG companies allowing them to burn huge amounts of natural gas to power their operations.

The natural gas / LNG bias of the provincial government even seeps into the discussion over the K-12 curriculum.  Many educators feel that environmental education is being sidelined or diminished in the proposed new curriculum for elementary and high school students.  Even words like “habitat, ecosystem, pollution, biodiversity, and sustainability” are being removed (Sierra Club letter, Jan. 15, 2014).  Furthermore, resource materials for teachers on these topics are no longer being generated by the province.  Instead, teachers often have to rely on lesson plans and materials provided or funded by the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) or the National Energy Board (Penn, Briony. Feb. 2014, Focusonline)

These are just some examples of the pronounced bias the current provincial government has towards the natural gas / LNG industry.  Judging from the recent Premier’s remarks, even more instances will be forthcoming.

Natural gas reserves are part of the resource wealth of the province, and, like any other resource, must be handled prudently and with a long term view in mind.  In that regard, an argument can certainly be made for some LNG development, but in a measured way, given the environmental issues associated with its extraction, as well as the well-known volatility and uncertainty of the industry itself, which could lead to stranded assets (and government having to use public funds to clean up the mess). 

But for an entire government to be consumed by and obsessed with a gold rush mentality for one particular industry is dangerous to the economic diversification and well-being of the province.  Even worse is to claim that all government decisions must be made through the lens of that industry.  Where is the sense of balance here?  Why does this volatile industrial sector get such priority, while other tried and true ones are neglected?

Indeed, this mania is one of the features of neo-liberalism.  The corporate and political elites that follow this policy have given up on province or nation building.  Instead, it is all about the fast buck and the quick score.  Neo-liberalism is characterized by virtual coup d’etats, whereby factions of big business literally seize control of government and bend the entire society to their will.  The public interest is trumped by private interest. 

The old arrangements have been tossed aside whereby government, before making its decisions, engaged in at least the appearance of public consultation or consensus.   Furthermore, within particular industries and business groupings, government often does not seek even the pretense of consensus anymore, but rather acts on behalf of this faction or that of the biggest, most powerful companies, while other players, especially the smaller ones, are elbowed aside.   

In a globalized world, all kinds of places have natural gas reserves and LNG facilities.  But not many places have the rich diversity of our forests, our rich farm and ranch lands that produce prized crops, our wild salmon and other seafood, our pristine parks and sparkling clean water.  On this basis, a diversity of occupations and industries has developed, some in existence for a hundred years or more.  That is our economic strength.  That is our legacy.  And it has served us well.

Instead of building upon this strength and uniqueness, of renewing and rejuvenating our forests and our traditional, as well as our more recently established industries, we have a Premier who is dazzled, like a moth, by the flare of some natural gas wells to the point that all sense of perspective and balance has been lost.  It is fickleness at its worst. 

And it will have consequences for the province.

(Last in a series of two articles).

Peter Ewart is a columnist and writer based in Prince George, British Columbia.  He can be reached at: peter.ewart@shaw.ca

 

 

Comments

“Many educators feel that environmental education is being sidelined or diminished in the proposed new curriculum for elementary and high school students. Even words like “habitat, ecosystem, pollution, biodiversity, and sustainability” are being removed (Sierra Club letter, Jan. 15, 2014). “

Oh come on. Did you fact check this Peter, or did you simply take the Sierra Club’s word for it?

You have got to be kidding me. Yes some of what you say is true. But a lot of it is just complete garbage and I would be truly embarrassed if I wrote this article. If you believe BC is going to live off the beetle kill ravaged forests forever get out of your cubicle for once and smell the roses. And give me one piece of evidence that shows farmers aren’t happy about this. I guarantee you it saves everybody money when they drill on farmers lands. Those farmers are paid a lot more per acre they lose to resource exploration than they make from their crop. And that means we are subsidizing them less ie. we don’t haveto give them as much free money

You are just as bad as the government if not worse. Except your a tree hugger who only states one side of the story
You don’t mention the economic benefits
You don’t mention the jobs
You don’t mention what the tax money created could help
You don’t mention the low unemployment in alberta compared to bc
You don’t mention how many corporate offices moved to alberta when the ndp was in power and agreed with what you say

There’s a reason the liberals were voted in. Because life isn’t filled with roses and cherry pies like you think. It’s hard. And this could benefit a lot of people for many years

It is also revealed in the arbitrary way in which privileges are hand out to the natural gas / LNG sector. For example, BC Hydro was blocked from burning natural gas at its Burrard Thermal Generating Station under the 2010 Clean Air Act, which resulted in the closure of that back-up facility. At the same time, an exemption to the Act has been granted to LNG companies allowing them to burn huge amounts of natural gas to power their operations.

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Sure makes you wonder when you read stuff like this. It’s OK to ship LNG offshore so they can burn it while here it pollutes too much?? A seriously mixed up message here.

Why do more flooding on the Peace? With all this ‘surplus’ natural gas, why not just power up some electric generators…

Hopefully he didnt get paid to write this crap. Obviously lives in the past…BC wasn’t built by people like Peter Ewert. BC was and is being built by people with vision. He must have worked for govt funded organizations all his life and hasnt a clue on how business actually operates. Don’t ever write a part 3.

Sportsfanatic.

How many Corporate office’s moved to Alberta, while the NDP was in power? No doubt you have this information at your fingertips. Please share it with us. Tks.

Jim13135. Exactly. Why not power up with LNG in BC.

This would provide cheap power for industry and for citizens. In fact the same amount of power could be generated with LNG for a 1/3 of the price of Site C, without any flooding, etc;

The reason we don’t use LNG is because the Government and BC Hydro don’t want to. Its just that simple.

Both the Government and Hydro, need some serious changes at the top.

Palopu power is not generated with LNG. NATURAL gas generation is more expensive than hydro. There is more maintenance with gas. Plant longevity is mush shorter and then there is the variability in gas price. A hydro plant has very little cost once built that is why hydro generation is the cheapest of all.

No point to argue with palopu anyone that says somehow you can generate power with LNG cheaper than you can generate it with a dam has some research to do. Also someone who tries to argue that the ndp did NOT cause corporations to bolt from bc to alberta needs to get real and smell the flowers

Of course Hydro makes more sense than LNG/Natural Gas for power generation for the reasons outlined above.

I’m not sure why Palopu has such a hate-on for anything to do with LNG, but it is amusing to read his posts on the subject.

Hydro power generation is a renewable resource and can almost be turned on and off to match power demand ebbs and flows. Exporting LNG brings cold hard cash back to the province while burning here to generate power only meets current and future power needs while bringing in no money.

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