Executives with Pathways Alliance member firms have approached pipe manufacturers over 400-kilometre pipeline that would transport carbon captured at oil sands facilities to an underground hub
A consortium of Canada ’s largest oil sands companies has reached out to pipe manufacturers, setting the stage for movement on a massive $16.5-billion carbon capture project that is expected to reduce emissions by 22 megatonnes a year.
“I’m optimistic that we’ll get those terms and we’ll keep it on track, but there’s still a lot of work to do.” Pathways members are “eagerly working together towards trying to get this done,” Mr. Stauth said. But he added that the complex nature of the discussions means there is no firm timeline on when the project will move forward.
Taking such a piecemeal approach would impair the regulator’s ability to adequately identify and assess all project-specific, direct, indirect and cumulative impacts, Ecojustice said. But that seems unlikely. The Impact Assessment Agency of Canada said in an e-mail that it has not received any information to indicate that the Pathways proposal would be subject to an assessment by the federal body.
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