Then I stand corrected. I figured it would come over from the big deposits in southern alberta.
Still, anyone complaining about that little technicality can fuck off. Canadian energy is Canadian energy.
According to our new AI overlords:
Alberta is connected to the Kitimat LNG project through the Coastal GasLink pipeline, which will transport natural gas from Alberta to the Kitimat LNG facility for liquefaction and export. The project also involved a proposed oil refinery in Kitimat that was intended to process Alberta oil from the now-defunct Northern Gateway pipeline.
And this must be why they're pissed off. (article from Feb. 2025)
Call it the final nail in the coffin of the Northern Gateway pipeline, even as Canada faces crippling US energy tariffs.
www.westernstandard.news
Call it the final nail in the coffin of the Northern Gateway pipeline, even as Canada faces crippling US energy tariffs.
That’s because Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault on Tuesday quietly terminated the environmental assessment of a proposed $11-billion oil refinery in British Columbia aimed at processing 200,000 barrels per day of Alberta oil flowing off the ill-fated Northern Gateway pipeline.
First proposed in 2016, Pacific Future Energy had envisioned the 150,000 barrel per day refinery, near Kitimat, as a way to export refined petroleum products like gasoline, diesel and jet fuel to Asia.
It would have operated in conjunction with a separate 200,000 bpd diligent recovery unit near Edmonton.
The project was to be fed from the now-defunct Northern Gateway pipeline, which was originally intended to transport 500,000 bpd of diluted bitumen from Alberta to the West Coast — and 200,000 bpd of natural gas liquids back again — before it was blocked by the federal government in 2016.
The cancellation of the Kitimat refinery is a significant, but inevitable, setback for those who had hoped to see new avenues for Alberta’s landlocked oil reach international markets. The project had garnered support from high-profile figures, including former Alberta cabinet minister and federal opposition leader Stockwell Day, who served on Pacific Future’s board of directors.
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The refinery’s cancellation adds to a series of setbacks for oil export projects on Canada’s West Coast. The Northern Gateway pipeline, originally proposed by Enbridge to transport Alberta’s oil to the Pacific, was rejected by the Trudeau government in 2016 after years of controversy and opposition from Indigenous and environmental groups.
Pacific Future Energy had positioned its refinery as a way to bypass those concerns by refining the oil domestically before export.
The proposed facility would have used carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology to minimize emissions, alongside a 200-megawatt gas-powered plant.