
Canada’s liquefied natural gas touted — and doubted — as a green ‘transition’ fuel
CALGARY — Canada’s first liquefied natural gas cargoes will soon arrive on Asian shores, a milestone touted — and doubted — as a boon for global emissions-cutting efforts.
“Cleaner energy around the world is what I think about when I think about LNG,” Shell Canada country chair Stastia West said in an onstage interview at the Global Energy Show in Calgary earlier this month.
Shell and four Asian companies are partners in LNG Canada in Kitimat, B.C., the first facility to export Canadian gas across the Pacific in an ultra-chilled liquid state using specialized tankers. A handful of other projects are either under construction or in development on the B.C. coast.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith told the energy show that Canadian oil and gas exports can be an “antidote” to the current geopolitical chaos.