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Energie Sanuenay LNG Terminal is a proposed LNG terminal in Port Saguenay, Quebec, Canada, also known as GNL Québec Terminal. As of 2024, there have been no project updates in over two years, and the project is presumed to be shelved.
Location
Project Details
- Owner: GNL Quebec[1]
- Parent: Freestone International LLC, Breyer Capital LLC[1][2]
- Location: Port Saguenay, Quebec, Canada
- Coordinates: 48.441644, -70.697435 (approximate)
- Type: Export[1]
- Trains: 2[1]
- Capacity: 11 mtpa (5.5 mtpa per train)[1]
- Cost: US$7.2 billion[3]
- Status: Shelved
- Start Year: 2025[3]
- Associated Infrastructure: Energie Saguenay Gas Pipeline[3]
Note: mtpa = million tonnes per year; bcfd = billion cubic feet per day
Background
GNL Quebec had been developing the Énergie Saguenay Project since 2014, involving the construction of a natural gas liquefaction complex at Port Saguenay. The goal was to export 11 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas (LNG) per year, sourced from western Canada. The Project included liquefaction equipment, storage facilities, and marine shipping infrastructures. The Project was worth an estimated US$7.2 billion and was slated to start operations in 2025. GNL Quebec aimed to build the world’s first LNG facility of such magnitude to be powered by hydroelectricity from a preexisting local grid. The LNG complex would be installed on lands belonging to the Administration portuaire de Saguenay (Saguenay Port Authority), adjacent to the existing Grande-Anse port facilities. Natural gas supply would have required a new gas pipeline, called the Energie Saguenay Gas Pipeline, linking the facility to the main transportation system in northeastern Ontario, making it possible to source gas from western Canada. Gazoduq inc. was the company developing the new infrastructure.[3] A strategic partnership, with a view to future shipments of LNG from Canada to Europe, was formed between GNL Québec and the Hanseatic Energy Hub, the owners of the proposed Stade LNG Terminal near Hamburg in Germany.[4]
There had been no progress on the project since 2014, and in March 2020 Berkshire Hathaway announced that it would not be investing roughly $3 billion in the project. According to media reports, the Berkshire Hathaway decision was linked to rail blockades opposing pipeline construction in British Columbia.[5]
The project was effectively cancelled in July 2021 when the provincial government rejected the project, citing that developers had failed to prove that it would cut global greenhouse gas emissions.[6]
In February 2022, Canada's federal cabinet formally rejected the project.[7]
In June 2022, Canadian firm Symbio Infrastructure signed a deal with Ukraine's oil and gas company Naftogaz to supply the latter with LNG and green hydrogen from the Energie Saguenay project.[8]
As of September 2024, there have been no project updates in over two years, with the project having been denied a government permit in 2022. The project is presumed to be shelved.
Articles and resources
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Barry Cassell, Canadian agency reviews application for Énergie Saguenay LNG project in Quebec, Transmission Hub, December 4, 2015
- ↑ U.S. Investors Seek LNG Export License for Quebec Terminal. Natural Gas Intelligence. October 28, 2014.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 "Project Summary" Energie Sanuenay, accessed April 2019
- ↑ Anthony Wright, "Low-carbon supply chain for LNG from Canada to Germany announced", Gas World, Jun. 4, 2021
- ↑ Alison Healey, "Berkshire Hathaway Drops Canadian LNG Project," The Motley Fool, March 6, 2020
- ↑ Gordon Jaremko, Quebec Quashes Energie Saguenay LNG Terminal on Environmental Grounds, Natural Gas Intel, July 22, 2021
- ↑ "Canada formally rejects Energie Saguenay's 1–4 bcf/d LNG export proposal for Quebec". Retrieved 2022-02-13.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ LNG Prime Staff (2022-06-13). "Symbio inks deal to deliver Canadian LNG and hydrogen to Ukraine's Naftogaz". LNG Prime. Retrieved 2022-07-30.