B.C. pipeline protests continue to halt Ontario trains for 5th day in a row

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
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Great article but the author missed three important points. First, the Canadian Energy Research Institute, associated with the University of Calgary, published a 2018 report which examined the economic feasibility of the Canadian LNG industry. They found that LNG prices would need to be between $9.50 and $11.50 per mmbtu in order for Canadian LNG to be profitable. As mentioned, current LNG prices are below $3.00 per mmbtu. Secondly, the virus scare is just a bump in the road - the real issues driving low LNG prices is a massive glut in natural gas supply as a result of the shale boom, horizontal drilling and fracking compounded by low oil prices. And analysts are not predicting significant improvements in either gas supply or oil prices in the absence of a major world armed conflict. Finally, in late 2019, Chevron, one of the world's largest oil and natural gas companies, announced it was abandoning its proposed Kitimat LNG plant and in January 2020 it announced it announced a $1.6 billion write-off against its failed Kitimat LNG project. All of these factors, and others, lead me to conclude that LNG Canada/Coastal GasLink will likely fail and not a single boat load of LNG will be shipped from Kitimat. And it will be economics, not the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs or environmentalists



Who will be on the hook if the largest private-sector investment project in Canadian history hits the rocks?

The LNG Canada plant and Coastal GasLink pipeline are being built at a time when a glut of LNG "is a major recipe for disaster", according to one analyst


The news cycle over the past two weeks has been dominated by acts of civil disobedience by supporters of Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs,
Their goal, by and large, has been to uphold the hereditary chiefs' authority over their unceded territory by thwarting a pipeline project.
But not much has been said about who will be left holding the bag if the Coastal GasLink pipeline ends up being cancelled.
B.C. taxpayers had better hope that Premier John Horgan's eagerness to woo this investment hasn't made them financially liable in any way.
That's because if this pipeline is halted, the corporation's lawyers will likely be examining whether the province misled investors.
As just one example, they could allege in court that the province falsely asserted legal authority to approve a pipeline on lands where Aboriginal title was not extinguished.
At a cost of $6.6 billion, the Coastal GasLink project is expected to deliver returns for decades to come to its investors—TC Energy, KKR, and Alberta Investment Management Corporation.
If that income is suddenly cut off—due to demonstrations or due to market conditions or due to a political change of heart, or a combination of all three—it could turn into a legal quagmire.
That pain for provincial taxpayers could conceivably be multiplied several times if the LNG Canada plant, which will receive natural gas through the pipeline, is also kiboshed.


More: https://www.straight.com/news/13619...ctor-investment-project-canadian-history-hits
 

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
Sep 6, 2008
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www.canadianforums.ca
Great article but the author missed three important points. First, the Canadian Energy Research Institute, associated with the University of Calgary, published a 2018 report which examined the economic feasibility of the Canadian LNG industry. They found that LNG prices would need to be between $9.50 and $11.50 per mmbtu in order for Canadian LNG to be profitable. As mentioned, current LNG prices are below $3.00 per mmbtu. Secondly, the virus scare is just a bump in the road - the real issues driving low LNG prices is a massive glut in natural gas supply as a result of the shale boom, horizontal drilling and fracking compounded by low oil prices. And analysts are not predicting significant improvements in either gas supply or oil prices in the absence of a major world armed conflict. Finally, in late 2019, Chevron, one of the world's largest oil and natural gas companies, announced it was abandoning its proposed Kitimat LNG plant and in January 2020 it announced it announced a $1.6 billion write-off against its failed Kitimat LNG project. All of these factors, and others, lead me to conclude that LNG Canada/Coastal GasLink will likely fail and not a single boat load of LNG will be shipped from Kitimat. And it will be economics, not the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs or environmentalists
Who will be on the hook if the largest private-sector investment project in Canadian history hits the rocks?
The LNG Canada plant and Coastal GasLink pipeline are being built at a time when a glut of LNG "is a major recipe for disaster", according to one analyst
The news cycle over the past two weeks has been dominated by acts of civil disobedience by supporters of Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs,
Their goal, by and large, has been to uphold the hereditary chiefs' authority over their unceded territory by thwarting a pipeline project.
But not much has been said about who will be left holding the bag if the Coastal GasLink pipeline ends up being cancelled.
B.C. taxpayers had better hope that Premier John Horgan's eagerness to woo this investment hasn't made them financially liable in any way.
That's because if this pipeline is halted, the corporation's lawyers will likely be examining whether the province misled investors.
As just one example, they could allege in court that the province falsely asserted legal authority to approve a pipeline on lands where Aboriginal title was not extinguished.
At a cost of $6.6 billion, the Coastal GasLink project is expected to deliver returns for decades to come to its investors—TC Energy, KKR, and Alberta Investment Management Corporation.
If that income is suddenly cut off—due to demonstrations or due to market conditions or due to a political change of heart, or a combination of all three—it could turn into a legal quagmire.
That pain for provincial taxpayers could conceivably be multiplied several times if the LNG Canada plant, which will receive natural gas through the pipeline, is also kiboshed.
More: https://www.straight.com/news/13619...ctor-investment-project-canadian-history-hits

Prog shit (as per Walter) :lol:

Nice source LGBTQ Libtard paper.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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5 FN curmudgeons.
That is interesting all by itself. Last week it was four, & this week it’s five. Did one change their mind? This is where it gets weird.
The one called “Woos” is the one where it went from 4 to 5.....but last week “Woos” was a woman NOT supportive of the 4/11 Hereditary Chiefs, & this week “Woos” is a man who supports the other 4/11 Hereditary Chiefs? Huh? Did Mr “Woos this week” inherit this hereditary title from Mrs “Woos last week” ??? Political shenanigans that the media isn’t mentioning? Say it isn’t so....
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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That is interesting all by itself. Last week it was four, & this week it’s five. Did one change their mind? This is where it gets weird.
The one called “Woos” is the one where it went from 4 to 5.....but last week “Woos” was a woman NOT supportive of the 4/11 Hereditary Chiefs, & this week “Woos” is a man who supports the other 4/11 Hereditary Chiefs? Huh? Did Mr “Woos this week” inherit this hereditary title from Mrs “Woos last week” ??? Political shenanigans that the media isn’t mentioning? Say it isn’t so....
Woo is a tranny. That's all they need to say.
 

Twin_Moose

Hall of Fame Member
Apr 17, 2017
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Well then, let the native Indians here in Canada start up their own Indian casinos on their own land. Go see their brothers in the states and see what and how it is done. I prefer to go to the Indian casinos in Washington state anyway because they are not cheap as our Canadian non-Indian casinos are. I get $5 dollars a week of free play money, while in Washington Indian casinos I can get up to $70 a week. They always offer plenty of free money, free hotel stays, and give away better prizes and better restaurants too. Our Canadian casinos are cheap casinos, especially the ones here in British Columbia. The casinos here in BC are the ones making all the money. They make a $100 and give us back 5. Whoop-dee-doo.

A bigger question, how come Casino profits don't show up in improvements on reserves to benefit the whole band?
 

captain morgan

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Mar 28, 2009
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Great article but the author missed three important points. First, the Canadian Energy Research Institute, associated with the University of Calgary, published a 2018 report which examined the economic feasibility of the Canadian LNG industry. They found that LNG prices would need to be between $9.50 and $11.50 per mmbtu in order for Canadian LNG to be profitable. As mentioned, current LNG prices are below $3.00 per mmbtu.


Here's the big reason why the tards at Georgia Strait have no business offering their uneducated opinion on this issue.


The price of $9.50 - $11.50 they quote is likely (if not already there) IN ASIA as opposed to the local Cdn price of $3.00.


The beauty of this arrangement is that with the LNG plant operating, a huge amount of the nat gas inventories in Western Canada will be exported to Asia while the remainder will have upwards pressure on the local/domestic price.


What with the BC gvt's policy of taxing everything into the stratosphere, I can see that the cost of living in the lower mainland will be rising in concert with the increased cost of the commodity.. Looks like the true believers will have yet another reason to get off hydrocarbons and stop being hypocrites
 

Jinentonix

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Sep 6, 2015
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Hereditary Chiefs. Great, now Canada is being held hostage by a f*cking anachronistic mind set. Yeah, that's REAL progressive.
 

Twin_Moose

Hall of Fame Member
Apr 17, 2017
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Time to confiscate and ban foreign investments into Canada designed to threaten our Economy and interfere with the rights of all Canadians.
 

Mowich

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Dec 25, 2005
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It's about money. It's always about money.
As I mentioned, pete - it very could be considering that is what generally is all about but I can't help thinking that UNDRIP also has something to do with the blockades. We can effectively say goodbye to one rule of law in Canada if it is implemented which is even more reason for the opposition in the House to block it.