Academics issue warning over Canada’s progress on climate change
EDMONTON — Academics from across Canada are warning that building more oil and gas infrastructure threatens the country’s climate-change goals.
“B.C.’s planning to increase emissions with (liquefied natural gas),” Jim Byrne, a climatologist from the University of Lethbridge, said Thursday.
Last month, the federal government approved plans for the $36-billion Pacific Northwest LNG project. It proposes to pipe natural gas 900 kilometres from British Columbia’s gas fields to Prince Rupert on the northwest coast where it would be cooled and liquefied for shipping.
The fuel is such a potent greenhouse gas that even a potentially small leak outweighs the benefits of using it instead of coal, Byrne said.


