A group of northwestern B.C. Indigenous leaders is encouraged by meetings with the NDP government about the prospects for liquefied natural gas development.
Members of the First Nations LNG Alliance travelled to Victoria this week, after Premier John Horgan91Ƶs government breathed new life into the emerging industry with tax incentives for the Shell-led LNG Canada project that would include an export terminal at Kitimat.
The Alliance is chaired by Chief Dan George of the , formerly known as the Burns Lake Band. He said the group91Ƶs role is to present the benefits and risks to communities along the proposed pipeline that would cross their territories.
91ƵThere are very few opportunities that come along in northern B.C.,91Ƶ George said in an interview with Black Press. 91ƵWe have very small communities, we don91Ƶt have prime real estate, so our economic development is very limited. These are once-in-a-lifetime opportunities for us.91Ƶ
The main environmental disturbance in the northwest today is the aftermath of the pine beetle epidemic. The salvage logging that followed has left clearcuts that extend for 30 km or more.
The Ts91Ƶil Kaz Koh council has been working for five years with TransCanada, proponent of the Coastal Gaslink pipeline that would bring natural gas from the northeast to the coast.
91ƵA pipeline uses a 200-metre right of way, and it91Ƶs relatively small compared to the big picture in northern B.C.,91Ƶ George said.
Karen Ogen-Toews is a former chief of and now CEO of First Nations LNG Alliance. She said the group had a warm reception from the NDP caucus, discussing environmental impact and the four conditions for LNG support set out by Horgan before last year91Ƶs election.
The conditions are a fair return to B.C. for the gas resource, jobs and training, partnerships with Indigenous communities and projects that fit the province91Ƶs greenhouse gas commitments.
91ƵLong before the NDP got in, we worked with both governments, and we have surpassed those four conditions,91Ƶ Ogen-Toews said.
Other alliance directors on the trip were Crystal Smith, Chief Councillor of the Haisla Nation, site of the proposed LNG Canada terminal, and Robert Dennis Sr., Chief Councillor Huu-ay-aht First Nations. Huu-ay-aht are partners on the Kwispaa (formerly Sarita) LNG project at Sarita Bay near the mouth of Alberni Inlet on Vancouver Island, the largest proposal that is not in the northwest.
Chief Clifford White of the represents the island group between the northwest mainland and Haida Gwaii, where the community known as Kitkatla has been occupied for 14,000 years.
White said the Gitxaala elected and hereditary leadership are concerned about the local environment, but also understand that LNG is a global project to replace coal91Ƶs impact on the atmosphere shared by all countries.
91ƵWe91Ƶre still living in poverty, so the opportunities like LNG when they come along, are important,91Ƶ White said. 91ƵWe have been fortunate that people have reached out in partnership with us.91Ƶ