Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. LNG Decision Faces Three-month Delay To Review Project Details For Environmental Review

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2016 01:11 PM
    VICTORIA — Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna says the creation of a liquefied natural gas industry offers a significant economic opportunity for British Columbia and Canada, which is why more time is needed to get it right
     
    McKenna has granted the federal environmental review agency an extra three months to review pollution-prevention plans for the proposed $36-billion Pacific NorthWest LNG export facility in northern B.C.
     
    McKenna says in a statement today she wants to give the project developers, who are backed by Malaysian state-owned energy giant Petronas, more time to clarify its pollution-reduction and construction plans before she presents the project to the federal cabinet for approval.
     
    The Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency issued a draft report last month that concludes the plant can be built without major environmental impacts, but it's now reviewing 34,000 public comments and new information provided by Pacific NorthWest LNG.
     
    B.C. government officials have been dispatched to Ottawa to discuss and clarify project details with officials.
     
    B.C.'s Natural Gas Development Minister Rich Coleman says the project has the potential to create thousands of construction jobs and generate billions of dollars in revenues.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death
    TimberWest Forest Corp. spokeswoman Monica Bailey said an equipment operator was killed Friday afternoon at the company's Bonanza Lake site near Port McNeill.

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees
    A choir sings hymns of peace on a downtown Vancouver beach while a small dinghy gently coasts ashore and a dozen people in life jackets, including a young boy, alight onto the sand.

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees

    Potential Tory Leaderships Candidates Test The Waters At Weekend Conference

    With no formal rules in place for the 2017 Conservative leadership vote, no candidate has yet to formally enter the race.

    Potential Tory Leaderships Candidates Test The Waters At Weekend Conference

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby
    The province tabled a bill last December aimed at setting up its own log three years after the Conservatives abolished the federal database for non-restricted guns, known as the long-gun registry.

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby

    Can Canada Meet Its Current 2030 Climate Target? Four Experts Chart A Path

    Can Canada Meet Its Current 2030 Climate Target? Four Experts Chart A Path
    If there is one constant in Canada's two-decade track record of international climate diplomacy, it is a repeated failure to make good on its collective commitments.

    Can Canada Meet Its Current 2030 Climate Target? Four Experts Chart A Path

    RCMP Racked Up $900,000 In Overtime During Undercover Anti-Terrorism Operation

    RCMP Racked Up $900,000 In Overtime During Undercover Anti-Terrorism Operation
    The RCMP spent just over $900,000 in overtime pay over the course of a five-month undercover operation that led to the arrests of two terrorism suspects in British Columbia.

    RCMP Racked Up $900,000 In Overtime During Undercover Anti-Terrorism Operation