Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Shell Postpones LNG Canada Final Investment Decision As Profits Plunge

The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2016 12:05 PM
    VANCOUVER — Royal Dutch Shell is postponing a final investment decision on its proposed liquefied natural gas megaproject in British Columbia as it grapples with plummeting earnings due to low energy prices.
     
    Chief executive Ben van Beurden said Thursday that the company was postponing a final commitment on the proposed LNG Canada project in northwestern B.C. as it makes "substantial changes in the company" the will likely include further spending cuts on top of the $12.5 billion it cut last year.
     
    Shell Canada spokeswoman Tara Lemay said that while the decision has been delayed, the joint venture still expects to make it this year. 
     
    "The LNG Canada joint venture partners have agreed that due to market conditions, it makes sense to shift the final investment decision to late 2016. In the meantime, the joint venture will continue to work on the competitiveness of the project," Lemay said in a statement.
     
    Shell reported a 44 per cent drop in fourth-quarter earnings as low oil and gas prices hit its bottom line. The company has responded by delaying projects in Canada and Nigeria and withdrawing from a project in the United Arab Emirates.
     
    Dirk Lever, an analyst at Altacorp Capital, says the delay by Shell because of capital costs and other headwinds increases the likelihood that Petronas could delay an investment decision on the Pacific Northwest LNG project as well.
     
    "Let's just say the odds are higher today than they were yesterday that they will postpone," said Lever.  
     
    The LNG Canada project already has conditional federal and provincial environmental approvals and was awarded a 40-year export licence in January.
     
    Construction was expected to start before 2022 and involve hiring between 4,500 and 7,500 workers. 
     
    Shell owns a 50 per cent stake in the project, which is being developed with partners Korea Gas Corp., Mitsubishi Corp., and PetroChina Co. Ltd.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Critically Ill Alberta Baby Dies Before Expected Life-Support Ruling

    Critically Ill Alberta Baby Dies Before Expected Life-Support Ruling
    Hermella Mammo died Dec. 20 at the Alberta Children's Hospital in Calgary.

    Critically Ill Alberta Baby Dies Before Expected Life-Support Ruling

    Judge Makes Recommendations In Death Of Woman Sent Home From Hospital In Cab

    Judge Makes Recommendations In Death Of Woman Sent Home From Hospital In Cab
    WINNIPEG — A judge says the death of a senior hours after she was sent home from a Winnipeg hospital in a cab was not preventable.

    Judge Makes Recommendations In Death Of Woman Sent Home From Hospital In Cab

    Motorcycle Industry In Canada Shifts Gears As It Copes With Low Loonie

    Motorcycle Industry In Canada Shifts Gears As It Copes With Low Loonie
    Canada's dollar has fallen to 11-year lows this month, largely because of persistently weak oil prices, slow global economic growth and the comparative strength of the U.S. dollar against other currencies.

    Motorcycle Industry In Canada Shifts Gears As It Copes With Low Loonie

    Storm Warnings Issued In Southern Quebec After System Moves Through Ontario

    Storm Warnings Issued In Southern Quebec After System Moves Through Ontario
    A powerful storm system which dealt southern Ontario its first real blast of winter this season moved into southern Quebec on Tuesday, with meteorologists expecting it to hit Atlantic Canada later in the day.

    Storm Warnings Issued In Southern Quebec After System Moves Through Ontario

    Life And Death On The Farm: Officials Hope Child Fatalities Spur Safety Culture

    Life And Death On The Farm: Officials Hope Child Fatalities Spur Safety Culture
    Catie Bott, 13, and 11-year-old twins Dara and Jana, suffocated in a truck loaded with canola as their family was busy bringing in the harvest in October.

    Life And Death On The Farm: Officials Hope Child Fatalities Spur Safety Culture

    Brother Of Canadian Who Killed Herself Says Us Court Rulings Won't Bring Her Back

    Brother Of Canadian Who Killed Herself Says Us Court Rulings Won't Bring Her Back
    The brother of a Carleton University student who killed herself in 2008 says whatever happens to the a U.S. man originally charged with trying to encourage her to commit suicide won't bring her back.

    Brother Of Canadian Who Killed Herself Says Us Court Rulings Won't Bring Her Back