PRGT pipeline hit with warning letter for environmental violations
Pipeline workers failed to properly assess endangered bat habitat before clearing land in northwest British...
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The Prince Rupert Gas Transmission (PRGT) pipeline has received a warning letter from the BC Environmental Assessment Office for “failing to properly mark environmentally sensitive areas” and failing to fully survey potential bat hibernation sites and roosts before clearing land last fall.
The warning letter was sent to the pipeline’s owners, U.S.-based Western LNG and Nisg̱a’a Lisims Government, on March 3 and published on March 14. It’s for apparent violations first noted during an inspection on Oct. 2, 2024, when a compliance and enforcement office with the assessment office visited pipeline construction sites on Nisg̱a’a territory, northwest of Terrace, B.C.
The provincial officer cited inconsistencies between required surveys for the presence of bats and the timing of clearing the pipeline right of way, noting workers cleared land before they “identified the presence of big brown or silver-haired bats emerging and in the vicinity” and concluding “these findings provide evidence of non-compliance.” Silver-haired bats are listed as endangered in Canada, due to dramatic population declines in recent years.
In its warning letter, the province noted the maximum penalty for failing to comply with an environmental assessment certificate is $1 million and, on subsequent convictions, up to $2 million for each violation.
Construction of the 800-kilometre PRGT natural gas pipeline was paused when its environmental assessment certificate expired last November. B.C.’s new Environment and Parks Minister Tamara Davidson will decide this spring whether or not to grant the project a “substantial start” decision, which would lock in its environmental approval indefinitely and allow construction to resume.
If built, the PRGT line would connect natural gas reserves in B.C.’s northeast — largely extracted by fracking, a water-intensive process that has been linked to earthquakes and human health issues — to a proposed gas liquefaction and export facility, Ksi Lisims LNG, near the mouth of the Nass River close to the Alaska border. Its name comes from its original route, which was slated to terminate in Prince Rupert.
The pipeline project, which was previously owned by TC Energy, the Calgary-based company that built the contentious Coastal GasLink pipeline, was originally approved in 2014. TC Energy sold the pipeline to Nisga’a Lisims Government and Texas-based Western LNG last year. The Nisg̱a’a government and Western LNG, along with Calgary-based Rockies LNG, are also partners in the proposed Ksi Lisims LNG facility.
As pipeline construction began last fall, Hereditary Chiefs from neighbouring Gitanyow Nation burned a benefits agreement they signed with TC Energy and closed their territories to all traffic related to the new pipeline. A few days later, Indigenous and non-Indigenous groups launched legal action against the project, alleging the BC Energy Regulator broke its own rules to green light construction. That was followed shortly by legal action against the proposed liquefaction plant.
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