Indigenous-owned Canadian LNG project advances

Ksi Lisims LNG can help respond to climate change while allowing for economic development

By Deborah Jaremko
Project site for the proposed Ksi Lisims LNG project, about two kilometers from the Alaska border. Photo courtesy Ksi Lisims LNG

There’s been a big step forward for a major proposed Canadian LNG project that is seen as an opportunity for both economic reconciliation with Indigenous communities and help to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. 

Partners in the Ksi Lisims LNG project, including the Nisga’a Nation, have applied for a 40-year LNG export license and filed a detailed project description with regulators. 

“The project has the potential to support the Nisga’a Nation and other Indigenous Nations’ goals of responding to climate change while allowing for economic development,” the project description says.  

Ksi Lisims would be a floating LNG project located on B.C.’s northern coast about two kilometers from the Alaska border.  

Its partners also include a consortium of B.C. and Alberta natural gas producers called Rockies LNG and a subsidiary of Houston-based LNG developer Western LNG. 

The project includes a natural gas pipeline originating in northeastern B.C. At full capacity, it would produce 12 million tonnes of LNG per year for exports primarily to Asian countries like China, Japan and South Korea.  

That makes it only slightly smaller than the LNG Canada project that is currently under construction at Kitimat, B.C., which will have capacity of 14 million tonnes per year in its first phase.  

The Nisga’a Naton has been working since 2014 to develop an LNG project in its treaty territory, it says.  

“The Nisga’a Nation, like most rural Indigenous communities, struggles with consistently lower employment and labour force participation rates. Currently, a number of employment barriers exist for Nisga’a citizens living on Nisga’a Lands including geography, low population density, and jobs which are typically lower income, lower skilled, and more vulnerable to economic downturns,” the project description says.  

“The direct and indirect economic benefits provided by the project will reduce social and economic disparities, improve the quality of life for all Nisga’a citizens, and enable the Nisga’a Nation to pursue economic self-determination.” 

Initial estimates are that across Canada the project will provide 21,000 employment opportunities, $890 million in annual provincial and federal tax revenues, and approximately $2.5 billion in annual gross domestic product. 

The Ksi Lisims LNG project will be designed to operate with net zero greenhouse gas emissions, which is important to the Nisga’a Nation, it says. This will be achieved by using renewable hydropower from B.C.’s electrical grid, using low-carbon Canadian natural gas that is subject to strong methane emissions regulations as LNG feedstock, and the short shipping time to Asian markets.  

Global LNG demand is expected to nearly double in the next two decades, crossing 700 million tonnes in 2040 compared to 380 million tonnes in 2021, according to Shell’s most recent outlook. 

Startup for Ksi Lisims LNG is targeted by the end of 2027. The project is expected to require federal and provincial review as well as an assessment under the Nisga’a Treaty. 

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