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To: Brumar89 who wrote (78631)7/27/2017 2:18:39 PM
From: Eric  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86355
 
Pacific NorthWest LNG is Dead: 5 Things You Need to Know

By Emma Gilchrist • Tuesday, July 25, 2017 - 13:53



Malaysia’s Petronas has cancelled plans to build the Pacific NorthWest LNG plant on Lelu Island near Prince Rupert, B.C., in a move seen as a major setback for B.C.'s LNG dreams and as a major win for those concerned about climate change and salmon habitat.

The project would have involved increased natural gas production in B.C.’s Montney Basin, a new 900-kilometre pipeline and the export terminal itself.

Here’s what you need to know about Tuesday’s announcement.

1) Why did Petronas decide to cancel the project?

In a press statement about the investment decision, Petronas cited “changes in market conditions.”

“We are disappointed that the extremely challenging environment brought about by the prolonged depressed prices and shifts in the energy industry have led us to this decision,” said Anuar Taib, chairman of the Pacific NorthWest LNG board.

Just a few years ago, B.C. was banking its future on the fate of about 20 proposed LNG facilities — based on the idea that our natural gas would be super-cooled into liquid and exported by ship to lucrative Asian markets. But it’s widely acknowledged that B.C. came late to the party, with the U.S. and Australia beating Canada to the punch.

The B.C. projects were predicated on exporting low-cost gas to Asia where prices were as much as five times higher than in North America in 2013. But by 2016, prices had plunged and have shown little sign of increasing.

Former premier Christy Clark had promised three LNG plants by 2020, 100,000 jobs in the LNG industry and a $100 billion Prosperity Fund. As it stands, it looks like only one small plant, Woodfibre LNG in Squamish, may go ahead.

The B.C. NDP, now in power, has opposed the Pacific NorthWest LNG proposal but supports the LNG industry generally speaking, provided it meets certain conditions.

2) Why is exporting liquefied natural gas bad for the environment?

The key concerns about Pacific NorthWest LNG have been salmon and climate change.

On the salmon front, the project was sited in a location the federal government had studied decades ago and found to be unsuitable for industrial development due to its importance to juvenile salmon.

“Out of all the places that you could imagine in the area, it is the worst possible place in terms of risks to fish,” Jonathan Moore, Liber Ero chair of Coastal Science and Management at Simon Fraser University, told DeSmog Canada last year.

About 300 million juvenile salmon rear in the Skeena estuary every year at the critical moment when they graduate from fresh to salt water. The Skeena salmon run is worth more than $110 million annually.


Photo: Freshwaters Illustrated.

On the climate change front, the Pacific NorthWest LNG plant would have been the single largest source of emissions in the country, emitting as much carbon dioxide equivalent as 1.9 million cars? How on earth would it have been that belchy?

Well, turning natural gas into a liquid is a hugely energy intensive process that consumes the equivalent of about 20 per cent of the gas along the way. To turn gas into a liquid it must be cooled to -160°C, which involves running giant compressor stations 24/7. That reduces the volume of the gas by more than 600 times. It then gets “regasified” (that’s really a word in the LNG world) on the other end.

Pacific NorthWest LNG was going to use natural gas to power that whole crazy process, making it a particularly egregious polluter. If built, Pacific Northwest would have accounted for between 75 and 80 per cent of total allowable emissions under B.C.’s 2050 climate target.

Despite all this pesky science, it has been a favourite BC Liberal talking point that exporting LNG will reduce emissions in other parts of the world — an argument that has been thoroughly debunked.

3) What does this all have to do with the Site C hydro dam?

Nothing. And everything.

Let us explain. It was the subject of much debate, but Pacific NorthWest LNG ultimately was going to rely on its own gas, not electricity, to run its compressors, so it wasn’t going to be a huge electricity consumer.

But at least three new transmission lines have been built in B.C.’s northeast to service the natural gas industry.

“In the name of making ‘dirty’ natural gas companies marginally less so, BC Hydro at the behest of the provincial government is aggressively pursuing a policy of providing ‘clean’ hydroelectricity to the gas industry so that its greenhouse gas emissions are lowered here in B.C.,” wrote Ben Parfitt of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives last year.

“It is this policy that provides the only credible explanation for why the Crown corporation is rushing to build the controversial dam at this time.”

Which is all to say: the entire narrative around the need for the Site C dam has relied heavily on the development of B.C.’s natural gas industry. Now the future for an LNG industry in B.C. looks bleaker than ever, it further calls into question the demand for the $8.8 billion publicly funded dam.

4) What does this announcement mean for B.C.’s natural gas industry?

That’s unclear right now, but the Petronas press release stated that the company and its North Montney Joint Venture partners “remain committed to developing their significant natural gas assets in Canada and will continue to explore all options as part of its long-term investment strategy moving forward.”

But how without a West Coast export facility? Well, TransCanada announced in June that the company would spend $2 billion to expand its NOVA Gas (NGTL) system to connect northern B.C. and Alberta natural gas producers to “premium intra-basin and export markets.”

That’s code for: our gas is going to go east, not west.

The North Montney Joint Venture is operated by Progress Energy Canada Ltd (a wholly owned subsidiary of Petronas) — the company responsible for building at least 16 unauthorized dams in northern B.C. to trap hundreds of millions of gallons of water used in its controversial fracking operations.

Other partners in the joint venture? Japan Petroleum Export Corporation (JAPEX), PetroleumBRUNEI, IndianOil Corporation (IOC) and Sinopec-China Huadian.

Their goal? To develop the resources in the North Montney formation located along the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in northeast British Columbia.

They own approximately 800,000 acres mineral rights in the North Montney with more than 52 trillion cubic feet of reserves and contingent resources, and more than 15,000 identified drilling locations. This is all “unconventional” gas, which means it’ll be accessed via fracking.

5) Wasn’t the project already approved?

Pacific NorthWest LNG was approved by the federal government in a controversial decision last September.

The company — wholly owned by the Malaysian government and boasting a questionable human rights record — had lobbied the federal government 22 times between February 1 and April 21, 2016, including meetings with Environment Minister Catherine McKenna and her chief of staff Marlo Raynolds.

It recently came to light in court documents that the feds hadn't even considered the cumulative climate impacts of the project while approving it and had actively decided not to impose conditions on the project to limit carbon pollution.

The approval was condemned by environmentalists as a licence for Canada to break its climate commitments. It was also broadly regarded as a horse trade, wherein the provincial government got the approval it wanted in return for the federal government getting the approval it wanted ( B.C.’s approval of the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline — which the new NDP government says it will fight with “every tool available.”).

Pacific Northwest LNG donated more than $18,000 to the BC Liberals between 2014 and 2017, while negotiating a reduced tax rate and reduced hydro fees.

Indigenous nations had wrestled with internal divisions over whether or not to support the project, but Lax Kw'alaams had rejected a $1 billion pay-off from Petronas. In Gitxsan territory, the Madii Lii protest camp had strategically blocked the path of the proposed pipeline, the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission (PRGT) pipeline

The pipeline had received provincial approval, but hit a roadblock last week when a federal court ruled the National Energy Board had made a legal mistake in not considering whether the pipeline was under federal jurisdiction since it was explicitly for an export project.

desmog.ca

My comments:

The numbers just don't pencil out anymore.

Renewables are just cheaper today and continuing to get ever cheaper for decades.

Another LNG project that was obsolete before it even started.

Eric



To: Brumar89 who wrote (78631)7/27/2017 2:18:50 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 86355
 
Gore’s new health warning: ‘Every organ system can be affected by climate change’

Supported by a testimonial from a gullible woman doctor. She saw heat-related problems among her patients and that was enough to convince her of Anthropogenic global warming. She had no evidence that such problems were once less common nor did she have any evidence that the heat was anthropogenic. And most of all she took no account of the fact that cold (winter) is the big killer. So anthropogenic global warming would actually save lives on balance. The woman is an airhead. I would hate to be one of her patients

In Al Gore’s new book, “An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power”, the former Vice President features a professor of pediatrics warning that global warming is impacting our health.

“Every organ system can be affected by climate change. When I say that, I get goosebumps,” says Pediatrician Susan Pacheco, a professor of pediatrics at University of Texas McGovern Medical School, in Gore’s new book.

Gore’s book features Pacheco and her climate change health warnings and touts the fact that the professor was inspired to get involved in climate activist after seeing his original film.

The book is a companion to Gore’s new film being released this month, a sequel to his 2006 film “An Inconvenient Truth.” The book is being billed as “Your action handbook to learn the science, find your voice, and help solve the climate crisis"

Gore wrote, “The obvious and overwhelming evidence of the damage we are causing is now increasingly impossible for reasonable people to ignore. It is widely know by now that there is a nearly unanimous view among all scientists authoring peer-reviewed articles related to the climate crisis that it threatens our future, that human activists are largely if not entirely responsible, and that action is needed to urgently prevent catastrophic harm it is already starting to bring.” (Climate Depot Note: Blaming extreme weather on “climate change” is not supported by evidence)

Pacheco warns in Gore’s new book that climate change is already making us sick. “There’s heart disease, there’s lung disease, there’s kidney disease,” she says in Gore’s book. Gore writes that Pacheco “didn’t become concerned with climate science until 2006. Her eldest son was learning about climate change in school,, so she took the family to see An Inconvenient Truth.”

“Pacheco became convinced she could see the effects in her own clinic’s waiting room, in the Texas children she saw suffering from asthma, heat sensitivity, and allergies. Children and the elderly, she discovered, tend to be the most vulnerable. And while many adults have lived for years in an environment less affected by climate change, today’s youth will grow up with an entire lifetime of exposure. The potential for damage and illness, she suspects, is much higher,” Gore wrote.

“Pacheco also founded the Texas Coalition for Climate Change Awareness. In 2013, the White House bestowed Pacheco with the illustrious “Champions of Change” award in recognition of her efforts,” Gore wrote.

climatedepot.com


[ This scare mongering is ridiculous. I pity the gullible fools who buy this nonsense. ]



To: Brumar89 who wrote (78631)7/27/2017 2:24:22 PM
From: Eric  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86355
 
100 Fossil Fuel Companies Responsible for 71 Percent of Carbon Emissions Since 1988 — And They’re Being Sued For it

According to research from the Carbon Disclosure Project, since 1988, 100 fossil fuel producers have been responsible for 635 billion tons of greenhouse gas emissions. This total represents 71 percent of human carbon emissions that have occurred over the past 29 years.

Companies involved in this massive carbon emission included such giants as ExxonMobil, Shell, BHP Billiton and Gazprom. The report also found that these 100 companies were responsible for fully 52 percent of all emissions since the industrial revolution began in 1751.

Report authors went on to point out that this relatively small group of companies is likely to have an outsized influence on responses to climate change — hopefully adding that positive action by such corporations could produce significant positive change. However, historically, such companies have tended to fight against global climate treaties, misinform the public on dangers related to human-caused climate change, and work to delay responses to climate change within their host nations. Due to this past bad-economic-actor behavior combined with rising climate change related damages, these corporations also are exposed to what may well be a historic and unprecedented corporate liability.



(If you were born in 2015, the estimate for your lifetime lost wealth from climate change, according to DEMOS, is between 581,000 and 764,000 dollars. With 100 companies responsible for 50 percent of that loss, it’s pretty obvious that liability will become a more and more serious impact as climate harms ramp up throughout the coming decades.)

A far-reaching liability that could well include various harms related to climate change coming from such diverse dangers as sea level rise, loss of water and food security, loss of habitability due to heat, and damage to valuable natural resources like forests, glaciers and reefs.

Already, a number of lawsuits are testing the legal waters in this regard. For example, in California this week, Imperial Beach, San Mateo and Marin counties are filing lawsuits to get some of the world’s largest fossil fuel producers to pay for sea level rise related damages. And if Imperial Beach and the two counties prevail, large corporations like Chevron, ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, BP and Royal Dutch Shell could be liable for billions of dollars in mitigation costs and punitive damages in coming decades even as direct damages from climate change ramp up.

According to the San Diego Union Tribune:

Attorneys for the plaintiffs said they modeled their legal tactics after past efforts to hold accountable cigarette businesses, makers of cancer-causing agents and gas and chemical companies that used methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE), a gasoline additive that has contaminated groundwater across the country.

And though not all liability related lawsuits against major tobacco and chemical companies were successful, those that stuck resulted in major awards even as the lawsuits themselves produced a very harmful public relations impact for the companies involved.

robertscribbler.com