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OUR VIEW: Time to quit playing politics over LNG

Despite having federal and provincial approvals in place, Petronas announced recently that it is scrubbing plans to build an $11-billion Pacific Northwest liquefied natural gas plant.

Despite having federal and provincial approvals in place, Petronas announced recently that it is scrubbing plans to build an $11-billion Pacific Northwest liquefied natural gas plant.

No doubt this comes as a big blow to anyone looking forward to the literally trillions of dollars the previous B.C. Liberal government promised us would flow through our economy in the LNG bonanza.

But that was in 2014 when the price of LNG was more than four times the price it is today.

Supporters of LNG have been gleefully suggesting the newly minted NDP government must wear this, saying their pre-election rhetoric scared off the big-time investment.

We missed the part where the new minority government passed legislation forcing other countries to beat us to the punch, establishing a glut on the market and lowering the commodity price.

There’s no question Petronas could have expected much more favourable terms on everything from taxation to environmental regulation under Christy Clark’s government, but experts outside the B.C. Liberal caucus have been pointing out for years that the economics of these expensive LNG plants and export facilities don’t make sense.

The Petronas announcement was actually just the latest in a string of similar announcements from LNG companies that they will hold off on big projects. The decision didn’t happen overnight.

So far, Woodfibre LNG is among a very few projects said to be moving forward, and it has the advantage of selling its gas to subsidiaries in Asia.

The market remains the biggest factor in these investment decisions – not politics.

– guest editorial courtesy North Shore News