Donate Newsletters
Home » Climate + Energy » Fossil Fuel Transition » Listen In: BC’s LNG Ambitions

Listen In: BC’s LNG Ambitions

SwatchJunkies

March 16, 2017

On Tuesday, Sightline senior research associate Tarika Powell joined KBAI’s Joe Teehan to discuss her latest report detailing the 20 liquefied natural gas projects proposed for the shores of British Columbia. The projects would stretch from the Salish Sea in the south to Stewart, BC, in the north, with major hubs at Kitimat and Prince Rupert. The province’s LNG ambitions could make it the world’s largest LNG exporter.* Listen in below (from 2:30 to 19:35), or find the full program online here.

[sightline-embed]

*Note: At minute 3:57, the word “importer” was used rather than the word “exporter.” We apologize for the error. Please see our recent article BC Wants to Produce Four Times as Much LNG as World’s Largest Exporter for more information.

Talk to the Author

SwatchJunkies

Talk to the Author

Serena Larkin

Serena Larkin is Sightline’s Senior Director of Communications, driving a comprehensive content strategy for the organization's research.

Fuel progress in Cascadia

Your gift directly fuels the smart, independent research that removes barriers to abundant housing, accelerates the clean energy transition, and strengthens democracy across Cascadia. We are a nonpartisan think tank providing the rigorous policy analysis and sophisticated arguments needed to deliver real-world change for our communities. 

Help Sightline reach our $90,000 goal before Dec. 2

Loading donation form...

About Sightline

Sightline Institute is an independent, nonpartisan, nonprofit think tank providing leading original analysis of democracy, energy, and housing policy in the Pacific Northwest, Alaska, British Columbia, and beyond.

For press inquiries and interview requests, please contact Martina Pansze.

Sightline Institute is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization and does not support, endorse, or oppose any candidate or political party.

You can power us forward on sustainable solutions.

See an error? Have a question?

Find the author's contact information on our staff page to reach out to them, or send a message to editor@sightline.org.

Thanks to Paul Tice for supporting a sustainable Cascadia.

Our work is made possible by the generosity of people like you.

×