British Columbia is entering a transformative phase in its energy sector, driven by a wave of major infrastructure investments across liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities, pipeline expansions, and natural gas liquids (NGL) transportation systems. These projects reflect a coordinated effort to expand export capacity, strengthen market access for Western Canadian production, and position the province as a leading supplier of lower-emission energy to global markets.
A defining characteristic of this buildout is the integration of electrification and emissions reduction strategies, with several LNG facilities designed to operate using clean hydroelectric power. In parallel, there is a growing emphasis on Indigenous leadership and partnership, with multiple projects being led or co-developed by First Nations, setting new benchmarks for inclusive and sustainable development.
The following summary outlines the key projects currently underway or in development across the province, highlighting their scale, strategic importance, and current status within the project lifecycle.
Project Summary
These projects represent a major buildout of British Columbia’s LNG export capacity, pipeline infrastructure, and NGL transportation systems, with a strong focus on:
- Low-emission / electrified LNG facilities
- Indigenous-led or partnered developments
- Export growth to Asia-Pacific markets
- Expanding Montney production takeaway capacity
Total capital investment across these projects exceeds $50+ billion, positioning B.C. as a key global LNG supplier and energy export hub.
Project Status Table
| Project | Type | Investment | Key Details | Project Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cedar LNG | LNG Export (Floating) | $4B | Indigenous majority-owned, low-emission LNG | Under Construction (Start-up ~2028) |
| Enbridge T-North Aspen Point | Gas Pipeline Expansion | $1.2B | +18 km, +535 MMcf/d capacity | Under Construction (In service 2026) |
| Enbridge T-South Sunrise | Gas Pipeline Expansion | $4B | +139 km, +300 MMcf/d | Approved / Pre-Construction (FID expected 2026) |
| Tilbury LNG Phase 2 | LNG Expansion | N/A | Storage + liquefaction expansion | Regulatory Review (EA underway) |
| Ksi Lisims LNG | LNG Export (Floating) | ~$30B (incl. pipeline) | 12 mtpa LNG, Indigenous-led | Pre-FID (FID 2026, build 2027) |
| LNG Canada Phase 2 | LNG Expansion | N/A (large-scale) | Doubles output to 28 mtpa | Pre-FID (Decision 2026–2027) |
| NEBC Connector | NGL Pipelines | $500M | 200+ km liquids/condensate pipelines | Under Construction (In service 2027) |
| Pembina Birch-to-Taylor | NGL Pipeline | $310M | 95 km, 120,000 bpd capacity | FID Approved (Early-stage development) |
| Pembina Taylor-to-Gordondale | NGL Pipeline | $341M | 89 km pipeline | Approved (Regulatory approval Feb 2026) |
| Woodfibre LNG | LNG Export | $12B | Net-zero LNG facility | Advanced Construction (~70% complete, 2027 start) |
Key Takeaways
1. Heavy LNG Focus
- 5 major LNG projects (Cedar, Ksi Lisims, Woodfibre, LNG Canada Phase 2, Tilbury)
- Strong emphasis on low-carbon LNG using hydroelectric power
2. Pipeline Buildout Supporting LNG
- Enbridge expansions + PRGT + NGL pipelines
- Designed to move Montney gas to export terminals
3. Project Stage Breakdown
- Under Construction: Cedar LNG, Aspen Point, NEBC Connector, Woodfibre
- Pre-Construction / Approved: Sunrise, Pembina projects
- Pre-FID / Early Stage: Ksi Lisims, LNG Canada Phase 2
- Regulatory: Tilbury Phase 2
4. Indigenous Participation
- Cedar LNG and Ksi Lisims LNG are Indigenous-led
- Growing trend in Canadian energy development
Overall Insight
B.C. is transitioning into a globally competitive LNG export hub, with projects staggered across timelines:
- 2026–2027: Pipeline capacity and first LNG expansions come online
- 2027–2028+: Major LNG export growth phase
- Post-2030: Potential full-scale export dominance with low-emission LNG
These projects represent an estimated $80–90 billion in combined capital investment, driven primarily by large-scale LNG export developments supported by pipeline and infrastructure expansions. Together, they position British Columbia as a major global LNG supplier while enabling long-term growth in Western Canada’s natural gas production and export capacity.





