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New Brunswick premier tries to sell Quebec on natural gas pipeline
New Brunswick premier tries to sell Quebec on natural gas pipeline

Montreal Gazette

time7 days ago

  • Business
  • Montreal Gazette

New Brunswick premier tries to sell Quebec on natural gas pipeline

Quebec Politics Quebec Premier François Legault says New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt's pitch for a natural gas pipeline to extend from Quebec City to her province must benefit Quebecers if it's to go ahead. That's as Holt says she's told Legault it will do so. On the sidelines of premiers meetings in Ontario cottage country, Holt said she met with Legault in attempts to push forward her call for what amounts to a new 300-kilometre pipe through eastern Quebec into New Brunswick. Holt wants that pipeline to be part of the Eastern Energy Partnership, a collection of electrical grid upgrades and energy infrastructure projects to be sold to the federal government as a priority nation-building project. Legault was questioned about that possibility in a closing news conference at the premiers' meeting while sitting alongside Holt on Wednesday. 'There's no project right now,' Legault said in French, suggesting the proposal is an 'idea' with no proponent to date. He added that 'if a project is brought forward, I would like to have more economic spinoffs for Quebec. 'It has to be good for Quebecers,' Legault said. Holt then responded that it would be beneficial for eastern Quebec industry. 'We're talking to Premier Legault and private companies and I really appreciate his point of view that they need economic spinoffs,' she said. 'It would be for companies between Quebec City and the border (of New Brunswick). 'I think Rivière-du-Loup is an example. They would also like to have natural gas, so we're working on this so that it might be something positive for Quebecers and New Brunswickers, both.' Additional natural gas infrastructure would help to correct Atlantic Canada's growing dependence on the United States. The region currently relies on natural gas imported from the U.S., with some sourced indirectly from western Canada, although also piped up through the southern border. That reliance increased after the shutdown of Nova Scotia's offshore natural gas production in 2018. Natural gas is now piped from the northeastern U.S. to some markets in Atlantic Canada through a 1,100-km transmission pipe operated by Maritimes & Northeast Pipeline. It was initially built to transport natural gas from offshore developments in Nova Scotia to markets in Atlantic Canada and then south of the border, but the pipeline flow was later reversed. Meanwhile, there's no pipeline infrastructure to get any natural gas to northern New Brunswick or eastern Quebec. Natural gas pipeline infrastructure exists from the western provinces through Ontario, but terminates in Quebec City. If that pipeline is extended to New Brunswick, from there, additional pipe could stretch across the northern half of the province to the Port of Belledune, as well as south to Fredericton, connecting parts of New Brunswick to gas infrastructure that is currently only available by truck. Speaking with New Brunswick reporters after the news conference, Holt said 'there are communities that I think would also appreciate natural gas access, like Rivière-du-Loup and others.' 'So François has been clear about what he needs for it to move forward in Quebec and we continue to work with all the different players involved to see if we can make this happen,' Holt said. There were previous plans, now nearly two decades old, to build a liquid natural gas terminal and a pipeline network at Gros-Cacouna, near Rivière-du-Loup. It had the region's support, but was delayed indefinitely due to supply issues. Meanwhile, complicating talks over a natural gas pipeline are other proposals in front of Quebec. In his response to reporters on Wednesday when asked about a natural gas pipeline, Legault brought up prospective projects in Sept-Îles or Baie-Comeau, on the other side of the St. Lawrence River. He also said they were ideas without proponents. In recent months, Legault has mused about building an oil pipeline to an export terminal in Sept-Îles, on Quebec's North Shore, that would carry western energy and then ship it overseas. 'Could we imagine having a pipeline that goes through northern Quebec which could end, for example, in the Port of Sept-Îles?' Legault said in the interview. 'Projects like that were unthinkable before Trump,' he said. 'Quebecers are saying, 'There's no way Trump is going to control the oil we produce in Alberta.' So, can we export it to Europe through Quebec instead of being stuck with Trump? There's openness. I feel things are shifting,' the premier added. New Brunswick's pitch would also aid the potential multibillion-dollar repurposing of the Saint John LNG facility into an export terminal. Holt has previously said her government has been talking to Repsol, the owner of Saint John LNG, and TC Energy (formerly TransCanada Corporation) about projects. Repsol abandoned plans in 2023 to build a liquefied natural gas export terminal in Saint John, citing the cost of shipping gas from western Canada to eastern tidewater. That concept would have used existing pipelines that traverse through the United States. The company kicked the tires in a race to supply Germany and other European countries looking to replace Russian gas amid the war in Ukraine. But the project ultimately went nowhere. The premiers' meetings in Ontario concluded on Wednesday.

Moving energy from Eastern Canada prioritized at first ministers' meeting
Moving energy from Eastern Canada prioritized at first ministers' meeting

CTV News

time03-06-2025

  • Business
  • CTV News

Moving energy from Eastern Canada prioritized at first ministers' meeting

A plan to generate and transmit energy from Eastern Canada to other markets has been prioritized as a 'nation-building' project, following a meeting with the premiers and Prime Minister Mark Carney. The Eastern Energy Partnership would link hydro and wind power from Atlantic Canada and Quebec to destinations in Western Canada and U.S. states in New England. An initial cost of $8 billion has been tagged for transmission infrastructure. Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston said a portion of the plan, dubbed 'Wind West,' would send energy from the province's offshore wind zones via a transmission cable. 'Nova Scotia's Wind West project can produce enough energy that is the equivalent of powering up to 27 per cent of the country's needs,' said Houston in a social media video post Monday evening. 'This energy is very valuable. New England has massive extra energy needs and they're certainly not alone.' New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt said she was 'really happy' to see the Eastern Energy Partnership emerge as a top priority at the first ministers' meeting, held in Saskatoon on Monday. 'The provinces have a role to play, the federal government has a role to play,' said Holt to reporters. 'They've expressed a strong desire to see those connections made between provinces to have an integrated grid that contributes to New Brunswick and to Canada being an energy superpower.' Oil pipelines were a focus during the first ministers' meeting, with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith expressing interest for potential pipeline routes that would bypass Quebec. 'I think what New Brunswick is most interested in right now is natural gas and extending a natural gas line that stops in Quebec City, a couple hundred kilometres to the border of New Brunswick,' said Holt. 'And then through New Brunswick to the different places that I mentioned: Belledune, down the west and connecting in at Fredericton and the Maritimes and northeast pipeline. 'That source of natural gas is something the industry wants. And then we can take it further and look at what we do with our LNG terminal in Saint John, if there's a reliable source of gas to put back into a liquefaction plan.' Holt responded to questions about Smith's pitch for an oil pipeline from Alberta to Hudson Bay to reach eastern markets, and what role New Brunswick could play. 'I think the timeline on a project like that is extensive,' said Holt. 'Probably a bit longer than it would take to build a couple hundred kilometres of natural gas line from Quebec City down.'

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