(Bloomberg) -- The world is bracing for a fight for natural gas supplies this year, prolonging the pain of higher bills for consumers and factories in energy-hungry Europe and putting poorer emerging countries from Asia to South America at risk of getting priced out of the market. Most Read from BloombergA Blueprint for Better Bike LanesWhat Robotaxis Brought San FranciscoAmbitious High-Speed Rail Plans Advance in the Baltic RegionNew York, San Francisco Ranked Worst for US Traffic in City Cente
There’s a huge LNG plant being built up in the north of BC (kitamat) with a metric fuckton of workers living in camps to get it done.
With these shortages seemingly getting worse every year, does that mean the new plant is going to be a drop in the bucket requiring basically constant construction of new production? Does Canadian natural gas even factor into the conversation?