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Monday, 4 May 2026

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May 1, 2026
 

The billionaires at the pinnacle of American power see a new way to make money from their friend Donald Trump’s war in the Middle East – and British Columbia is key to their plans.


This week Reuters broke the story that Wall Street private equity firms KKR, Blackstone and Apollo Global Management are all vying to buy Shell’s 40 per cent stake in LNG Canada.


KKR, and its intelligence chief David Petraeus, already own a controlling stake in the Coastal GasLink pipeline. Petraeus has been talking up LNG exports since he left the CIA in 2013.


Apollo and Blackstone are investors in the nearby Ksi Lisims LNG proposal. Both are led by CEOs with close ties to the White House and its American Energy Dominance doctrine.


Why are they moving to buy up more gas export infrastructure on the B.C. coast? In short, they see a chance to squeeze poor countries for cash, while prolonging reliance on fossil fuels.


“More and more Asian customers, given recent events, are interested in diversifying their supplies and willing to pay a premium for that,” Shell CEO Wael Sawan said this week.


In other words, LNG terminal owners in North America believe they can sell fuel at “premium” prices, with a promise the U.S. military will protect their supply chains.


Until the war, Qatar was producing 20 per cent of the world’s LNG. Then Iranian drones hit its production facilities, and the Revolutionary Guard choked off the Strait of Hormuz.


This is the boogeyman U.S. companies are using to bully other countries into signing their long-term fuel contracts. But those high prices are prompting many to switch to renewables instead.


The fact it’s Wall Street private equity firms leading this strategy tells you how risky it really is. As we speak, many countries are moving to reduce their reliance on the American gas cartel.


Shell is talking up the potential of LNG Canada like a used car salesman who knows the engine could blow at any minute. Canadian taxpayers, and pension funds, would be wise to steer clear.

  
NEWS
Stories we’re following

American LNG investors want cash from Canadians, and they want it now. How Wall Street plans to hijack the Canada Infrastructure Bank, and what you can do to stop them. - Dogwood

In Norway, taxes from oil companies go into a sovereign wealth fund that invests for citizens. In Canada, taxpayers are borrowing billions to invest in … oil companies? - National Observer    

The last Liberal Prime Minister vowed to phase out fossil fuel subsidies by 2025. Critics say the Carney government’s new tax credit for LNG terminals breaks that promise. - Bloomberg

Canadian politicians say they’re defending sovereignty, then use tax dollars to grease resource takeover deals by American billionaires, like Ksi Lisims LNG. - On The Trail with Isaac Peltz

The LNG Canada terminal is broken, underperforming and faces uncertain demand. It’s the kind of risky project U.S. private equity firms love, and Shell is happy to sell it to them. - Reuters

Tired of breathing fumes from LNG Canada’s faulty flare stack, the City of Terrace becomes the latest B.C. town to call for a health impact assessment of the LNG industry. - CBC News

The American-backed pipeline got a permanent certificate extension from the province. But a Gitxsan house group along the route says B.C. failed to consult them. - Times Colonist

Despite the RCMP claiming it no longer spies on Indigenous leaders, documents show the B.C. government is keeping tabs on LNG opponents, using the Critical Response Unit. - The Tyee 

The world’s leading energy economist says the Hormuz supply crunch is driving a long-term shift to an electrified future, with demand for fossil fuels unlikely to recover. - The Guardian

  
Action

No taxpayer bailout for American LNG!

The Canada Infrastructure Bank is about to decide on a massive loan for Ksi Lisims LNG. This Wall Street scheme can’t survive without public money. Message the Canada Infrastructure Bank’s board members and urge them to vote no!

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Squaredancing for climate justice? Sounds more fun than reading about Wall Street private equity CEOs and their ghoulish plans for global domination. Tickets to the hootenanny start at $5, with dinner included! Get the details...
  
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