Realist: news and analytics

Русский/English/العربية

  • News
  • Russia
  • Caucasus
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Experts
No Result
View All Result
Realist: news and analytics
  • News
  • Russia
  • Caucasus
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Experts
No Result
View All Result
Realist: news and analytics

Canada bets on LNG to fuel its energy future and counter US trade risks

With LNG Canada finally operational, Ottawa eyes a global energy role — but opposition, costs, and infrastructure gaps remain.

   
July 4, 2025, 07:38
Business & Energy
Speer Group launches Germany’s first defence-focused venture fund to bridge critical investment gap

KITIMAT (Realist English). Once dubbed “the town of tomorrow,” the remote community of Kitimat in British Columbia is again at the center of Canada’s industrial ambitions. This week, the multibillion-dollar LNG Canada terminal began shipping liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Asia, marking a milestone in Ottawa’s effort to reposition the country as an energy superpower.

Backed by Shell, Mitsubishi and other Asian firms, the C$40bn facility is the largest energy infrastructure project in Canadian history and the country’s first LNG terminal. For Kitimat, it signals a potential rebirth after decades of industrial decline. For Prime Minister Mark Carney, it’s a centerpiece in a broader strategy to boost energy exports, diversify trade routes beyond the US, and counterbalance rising geopolitical uncertainty.

“President Trump’s tariffs are disrupting trade and threatening Canadian jobs,” said Energy Minister Tim Hodgson, referencing the Biden-to-Trump policy shift in Washington. “Projects like LNG Canada are a cornerstone of our plan to secure long-term competitiveness while building the world’s most reliable low-carbon energy system.”

A delayed energy pivot

Despite abundant gas reserves, Canada has long struggled to build infrastructure to access global markets. Over 90% of oil and gas exports go to the US, often sold at a discount due to lack of international transport links. Decades of regulatory delays, environmental opposition, and infrastructure deficits have stymied efforts to build pipelines or LNG terminals.

That left the field open to the US, now the world’s top LNG exporter, which has rapidly expanded its Gulf Coast terminals. Canada, meanwhile, saw over a dozen LNG projects canceled in the past 15 years. Only LNG Canada, plus two smaller projects — Woodfibre LNG and Cedar LNG — are currently under construction.

According to Masaru Saito of Mitsubishi, the Canadian opportunity remains immense: “We believe Canada can become a major player in the global energy landscape. The resource base and capacity are there.”

Still, the route to that future is complex. Construction of the Coastal GasLink pipeline — the lifeline to the LNG Canada terminal — faced opposition from First Nations, cost overruns, and protests, eventually doubling in cost to C$14.5bn. Indigenous leaders like Chief Na’moks of the Wet’suwet’en Nation continue to warn of environmental and democratic erosion: “We will not support the destruction of our lands or our rights.”

Competing visions, competing pressures

Carney’s government recently passed legislation to fast-track environmental reviews for “national interest” energy projects, hoping to compress approval timelines to two years. But indigenous groups say it undermines their legal right to meaningful consultation.

At the same time, Canada’s energy sector sees the need for urgency. A proposed emissions cap introduced under Trudeau-era climate policies remains in place, even as Carney has scrapped the controversial carbon tax. According to François Poirier, CEO of TC Energy, Canadian LNG can play a critical role in helping Asia reduce coal use — if regulatory burdens are eased.

“Canada can’t afford to delay any longer,” said Lisa Baiton, head of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. “We’re facing $100bn in potential projects — but they need a clear path forward.”

Local partnerships as a new model

Some First Nations leaders are embracing development — under specific conditions. Last month, Enbridge sold a 12.5% stake in its Westcoast pipeline system to a consortium of 36 Indigenous communities, backed by a federal loan program. Meanwhile, the Haisla Nation is preparing to host Cedar LNG, a majority-indigenous-owned floating plant set to begin operations near Kitimat.

“Partnership is the key,” said Crystal Smith, chief councillor of the Haisla. “If Canada wants to be an energy superpower, First Nations must be in the driver’s seat.”

Strategic upside, competitive pressure

According to Wood Mackenzie, Canadian LNG has a cost advantage on shipments to Japan — especially due to Kitimat’s 10-day shipping time, compared to over 20 from the Gulf Coast. The facility is also powered by hydroelectricity, giving it one of the lowest carbon footprints in the global LNG market.

Still, global competition is fierce. Shell projects a 60% surge in LNG demand by 2040, driven by Asian markets seeking to reduce coal use. But for Canada to claim a significant share, it must overcome decades of inertia, resolve internal political divides, and win investor confidence.

For now, the flame flares over Kitimat’s skyline again — this time not as a symbol of decline, but of a nation testing its energy ambitions in a fractured world. Whether that ambition translates into lasting infrastructure, market power, and domestic consensus remains Canada’s next big test.

CanadaLNG Market
Previous Post

Microsoft lays off 830 employees in Washington as part of broader job cuts

Next Post

AI-powered heartbreak: How ChatGPT became the ghostwriter of modern break-ups

Related Posts

U.K. economy shrinks again in May amid U.S. tariffs and business uncertainty
Business & Energy

U.K. economy shrinks again in May amid U.S. tariffs and business uncertainty

11 July, 2025
Nvidia briefly hits $4tn market cap, leading AI-driven tech rally
Business & Energy

Nvidia briefly hits $4tn market cap, leading AI-driven tech rally

10 July, 2025
FBI launches criminal investigation into former CIA and FBI chiefs over 2016 Russia probe
Business & Energy

EU closes in on Trump trade deal as UK secures better terms

9 July, 2025
Samsung profits plunge 56% amid Nvidia delays and US chip restrictions
Business & Energy

Samsung profits plunge 56% amid Nvidia delays and US chip restrictions

8 July, 2025
Software, speed, and code: FY2026 budget reveals how the Pentagon plans to fight tomorrow’s wars
Business & Energy

Trump threatens 10% tariffs on nations aligning with BRICS

7 July, 2025
Gen Z alcohol consumption rises as boomers cut back, challenging industry assumptions
Business & Energy

Trump announces reduced tariffs on Vietnam, averts trade clash ahead of broader import hikes

3 July, 2025
Most Popular
Most Popular
FBI launches criminal investigation into former CIA and FBI chiefs over 2016 Russia probe

FBI launches criminal investigation into former CIA and FBI chiefs over 2016 Russia probe

9 July, 2025

WASHINGTON (Realist English). The Federal Bureau of Investigation has opened criminal investigations into former CIA Director John Brennan and former...

Roman Starovoit

Roman Starovoit and the collapse of a technocratic glossy dream

8 July, 2025

MOSCOW (Realist English). I can’t stop thinking about the story of Roman Starovoit. If you think about it, the former...

Software, speed, and code: FY2026 budget reveals how the Pentagon plans to fight tomorrow’s wars

Putin calls for deeper BRICS cooperation and new financial infrastructure at Rio summit

7 July, 2025

RIO DE JANEIRO (Realist English). Russian President Vladimir Putin called for stronger integration among BRICS nations and greater independence from...

Elon Musk announces launch of third party after fallout with Trump

Elon Musk announces launch of third party after fallout with Trump

6 July, 2025

WASHINGTON (Realist English). Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk announced on Saturday the formation of a new political force — the America...

Opinion

Roman Starovoit

Roman Starovoit and the collapse of a technocratic glossy dream

8 July, 2025

MOSCOW (Realist English). I can’t stop thinking about the story of Roman Starovoit. If you think about it, the former...

Bezos’s Venetian wedding: a manifesto of new feudalism

Bezos’s Venetian wedding: a manifesto of new feudalism

30 June, 2025

VENICE (Realist English). When Jeff Bezos rents half of Venice for a $50 million wedding, it is more than the...

Not Mossad’s strength — but Iran’s weakness

Not Mossad’s strength — but Iran’s weakness

16 June, 2025

TBILISI (Realist English). The recent targeted assassinations of senior IRGC commanders and high-ranking Iranian officers are not simply the triumph...

The Church belongs to Christ, not to politicians: The Armenian Apostolic Church becomes a casualty of Yerevan’s political agony

The Church belongs to Christ, not to politicians: The Armenian Apostolic Church becomes a casualty of Yerevan’s political agony

12 June, 2025

YEREVAN (Realist English). First, they handed over part of the Holy Land to the Baku fascists, betraying the Armenians of...

All rights reserved.

© 2017-2025

  • About Us
  • Mission and Values
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

Follow Realist English

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Russia
  • Caucasus
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Experts

Русский/English/العربية