On Nov. 16, the Tsawwassen First Nation announced its interest in building a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal on Tsawwassen reserve land, south of Vancouver. The LNG terminal would produce three to five million tonnes of LNG annually and result in five to six monthly LNG tanker visits off the coast of Delta at Roberts Bank.
Should the facility be built, it could demonstrate the kind of win-win relationship that could bring prosperity to both the First Nation and all of British Columbia.
The next step is to obtain the approval of the 363 members of Tsawwassen First Nation, 170 of which currently do not live on the reserve. The initial community vote is scheduled for Dec. 16 and, if the community members support the project, Tsawwassen leadership can move forward with environmental assessments and government permitting with the intention of having the facility up and running by 2022.
If approved, the LNG project would offer many benefits. According to Tsawwassen First Nation, those benefits will include: an unspecified financial benefits package, up to 1,000 jobs during construction and 50 to 100 permanent jobs, education and training programs for Tsawwassen First Nation members and community recreational on-reserve infrastructure.
All of these benefits will advance prosperity on the urban reserve. And they could use the help: between 2006 and 2011 the community’s unemployment rate grew by 7.5 per cent from 2.2 per cent to 9.7 per cent.
This is not the first on-reserve natural resource facility being proposed in Canada. Other First Nations communities have successfully built resource facilities on reserve land in partnership with industry partners. For example, Muskowekwan First Nation in Saskatchewan is partnering with Encanto Potash to build the first on-reserve potash facility in Canada; and the Haisla Nation in B.C. has built LNG storage and marine facilities on reserve land.
Furthermore, if this First Nation’s project is approved, it would help achieve Premier Christy Clark’s LNG goals for the province. With large reserves of natural gas and a geographic advantage, B.C. has the potential to become a major supplier to the growing Asia-pacific markets. But the process has been slow and delays have become the norm. One recent study estimated that the cost of regulatory delay imposed upon LNG investments, in terms of forgone export revenues, could be $22.5 billion per year in 2020, increasing to $24.8 billion per year in 2025.
Another estimate, from the B.C. government, calculated that if five LNG plants were built, the benefits for British Columbians over a 30-year period could amount to total investment of $175 billion, add $1 trillion to the province’s gross domestic product, and lead to the establishment of 23,800 permanent direct and indirect jobs for operations. These are benefits that all British Columbians will enjoy.
Tsawwassen First Nation is “committed to building a better quality of life for its members and the development of a successful and sustainable economy while creating an ideal location to raise a family.” If this on-reserve LNG facility is approved, it will advance the province’s LNG goals while giving the Tsawwassen First Nation education and training programs, opportunities for well-compensated employment, and private-sector supported on-reserve infrastructure projects. All of which will help better the quality of life for Tsawwassen First Nation members and all other British Columbians.
Commentary
Tsawwassen First Nation’s proposed LNG facility could benefit all British Columbians
EST. READ TIME 3 MIN.Share this:
Facebook
Twitter / X
Linkedin
On Nov. 16, the Tsawwassen First Nation announced its interest in building a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal on Tsawwassen reserve land, south of Vancouver. The LNG terminal would produce three to five million tonnes of LNG annually and result in five to six monthly LNG tanker visits off the coast of Delta at Roberts Bank.
Should the facility be built, it could demonstrate the kind of win-win relationship that could bring prosperity to both the First Nation and all of British Columbia.
The next step is to obtain the approval of the 363 members of Tsawwassen First Nation, 170 of which currently do not live on the reserve. The initial community vote is scheduled for Dec. 16 and, if the community members support the project, Tsawwassen leadership can move forward with environmental assessments and government permitting with the intention of having the facility up and running by 2022.
If approved, the LNG project would offer many benefits. According to Tsawwassen First Nation, those benefits will include: an unspecified financial benefits package, up to 1,000 jobs during construction and 50 to 100 permanent jobs, education and training programs for Tsawwassen First Nation members and community recreational on-reserve infrastructure.
All of these benefits will advance prosperity on the urban reserve. And they could use the help: between 2006 and 2011 the community’s unemployment rate grew by 7.5 per cent from 2.2 per cent to 9.7 per cent.
This is not the first on-reserve natural resource facility being proposed in Canada. Other First Nations communities have successfully built resource facilities on reserve land in partnership with industry partners. For example, Muskowekwan First Nation in Saskatchewan is partnering with Encanto Potash to build the first on-reserve potash facility in Canada; and the Haisla Nation in B.C. has built LNG storage and marine facilities on reserve land.
Furthermore, if this First Nation’s project is approved, it would help achieve Premier Christy Clark’s LNG goals for the province. With large reserves of natural gas and a geographic advantage, B.C. has the potential to become a major supplier to the growing Asia-pacific markets. But the process has been slow and delays have become the norm. One recent study estimated that the cost of regulatory delay imposed upon LNG investments, in terms of forgone export revenues, could be $22.5 billion per year in 2020, increasing to $24.8 billion per year in 2025.
Another estimate, from the B.C. government, calculated that if five LNG plants were built, the benefits for British Columbians over a 30-year period could amount to total investment of $175 billion, add $1 trillion to the province’s gross domestic product, and lead to the establishment of 23,800 permanent direct and indirect jobs for operations. These are benefits that all British Columbians will enjoy.
Tsawwassen First Nation is “committed to building a better quality of life for its members and the development of a successful and sustainable economy while creating an ideal location to raise a family.” If this on-reserve LNG facility is approved, it will advance the province’s LNG goals while giving the Tsawwassen First Nation education and training programs, opportunities for well-compensated employment, and private-sector supported on-reserve infrastructure projects. All of which will help better the quality of life for Tsawwassen First Nation members and all other British Columbians.
Share this:
Facebook
Twitter / X
Linkedin
Ravina Bains
Taylor Jackson
Independent Researcher
STAY UP TO DATE
More on this topic
Related Articles
By: Julio Mejía, Elmira Aliakbari and Tegan Hill
By: Kenneth P. Green
By: Kenneth P. Green
By: Julio Mejía and Elmira Aliakbari
STAY UP TO DATE