News

Global appetite for LNG is on the rise, but some caution Canada faces significant challenges in becoming a significant industry player.
How does Canada's burgeoning LNG industry measure up to its ambitions? Here are the ins and outs of producing liquefied natural gas and the major LNG projects on the go in Canada ...
By Newsbase LNG Canada is gearing up to produce its first LNG in June, Reuters reported on May 5 citing sources familiar with the matter. Canada’s flagship project has finished the cooldown ...
Shell PLC's LNG Canada export project in British Columbia plans to start building its proposed second phase with natural gas-powered turbines and switch to electricity as more renewable power ...
The Shell-led (NYSE:SHEL) LNG Canada liquefaction plant at Kitimat, British Columbia, has produced its first liquefied natural gas for export, a project spokesperson said Sunday, although only ...
Just recently, it seemed as though Canada’s LNG ambitions might finally come to fruition, but legal challenges and opposition of a once-promising project have sucked the life from supporters ...
A new LNG export facility on Canada's West Coast will be massive for the natural gas sector, but the industry will still face a few more years of exceptionally low prices before it can profit from ...
Canada will look at supporting more liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals as long as they are economically feasible because they are needed to keep the world from burning coal again amid the ...
Canada is making significant strides in developing its first LNG export facility, with the potential to boost North America's LNG supply chain.
LNG Canada will begin with the construction of two production units known as trains that will be able to make a combined 14 million metric tons of LNG per year.
Kitimat's LNG Canada set to make its first shipment: Here's what to know A decade after the project first received regulatory approval, government says the first shipment heralds the largest ...
LNG Canada would initially export 13 million metric tons of LNG per year, primarily to customers in Asia. Meanwhile, a potential second phase could double its capacity in the future.