Bay du Nord not liable for end-use emissions, marine shipping, company lawyer says
OTTAWA — A Federal Court judge could determine whether oil and gas projects must be assesses for environmental impacts related to the shipping and end-use of their products, on top of those resulting from production.
That is a central question in a legal challenge of the federal government’s authorization of the Bay du Nord offshore floating oil project proposed for an area in the North Atlantic Ocean 500 kilometres northeast of St. John’s, N.L.
Equinor, the Norwegian state energy firm proposing Bay du Nord, hasn’t yet confirmed it will proceed with the project. If it does, it is expected that it will produce at least 300 million barrels of oil, and possibly more than three times that much, over a 20- to 30-year period.
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault approved the project in April 2022 following an Impact Assessment Agency review and environmental assessment.

