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Canadian regulator confirms that the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission Pipeline project has begun

The British Columbia Environmental Assessment Office determined on Thursday that the work on the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission Natural Gas Pipeline Project has already been substantially begun, according to the provincial government.

B.C. said that the decision meant a certificate of environmental assessment for 2014 will remain valid indefinitely unless it is suspended or revoked under the Environmental Assessment Act. In a press statement, the government confirmed this.

The PRGT project, which spans 900 km from Hudson's Hope to Lelu Island near Prince Rupert on Canada's Pacific Coast. The 900-kilometre PRGT project will run from Hudson's Hope in northeastern B.C.

The Nisga'a First Nation, and Western LNG acquired it from TC Energy in March 2024 for the purpose of supplying natural gas to a proposed 12 million tonneS/year Ksi Lisims liquefied-natural facility.

The certificate of environmental assessment issued in 2014 required that substantial progress be made on the project by November 25, 2020.

The B.C. The B.C.

According to the government statement, compliance and enforcement officers would continue to monitor PRGT throughout its construction and operation in order to ensure that it met all environmental requirements. (Reporting by Anjana Anil in Bengaluru; Editing by Nia Williams)

(source: Reuters)