The B.C. governmentās $200-million contribution to the electrification of Cedar LNG is facing sharp criticism from environmental advocates, who say the public funding contradicts the provinceās climate goals and extends reliance on fossil fuels.
āThe BC NDPās decision to financially support another liquefied natural gas (LNG) project is irresponsible,ā Jeremy Valeriote, interim leader of the B.C. Green Party and MLA for West VancouverāSea to Sky said. āIt prolongs our dependence on fossil fuels and contradicts the Provinceās legislated emissions-reduction targetsāwhich we have already failed to meet.ā
Announced July 29, the provincial funding will support the infrastructure needed to connect the Haisla Nationāled Cedar LNG project to the provincial electricity grid. The floating LNG facility, located near Kitimat, is majority-owned by the Haisla Nation in partnership with Pembina Pipeline Corporation. The federal government has also committed $200 million to the project.
Critics, however, argue the public should not be subsidizing fossil-fuel infrastructure. āWhy is the public on the hook, yet again, to subsidize the LNG industry?ā asked Shannon McPhail, co-executive director of the Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition. āIf LNG were a viable economic option, it wouldnāt require billions of dollars in public money.ā
McPhail noted that key infrastructureāsuch as the North Coast Transmission Lineāis still years away, with no scheduled completion before 2030. āWeāre racing to the bottom by tying ourselves to a volatile, polluting industry that is on life support even with public funding,ā she said.
Valeriote also accused the province of greenwashing, saying officials repeatedly claim B.C. produces the ālowest-emission LNG in the worldā without offering data. āPublicly subsidizing LNG expansion is not a ācleanā way forward and harms climate and communities upstream from fracking,ā he said.
He went on to criticize what he described as a recent policy shift, saying LNG facilities are no longer required to be net-zero by 2030, but only to have a plan in place by then.
āInstead of funnelling public money into LNG,ā Valeriote said, āthe Province should invest in economic pathways that support long-term sustainability, public health, and community well-being.ā