Geologist hired to study sediment calls Flora Bank LNG approval ‘science fraud’
When Patrick McLaren first pitched a sediment analysis of the port of Prince Rupert, B.C., seabed, he had no idea he would uncover a “mind-blowingly wonderful” 8,000-year-old anomaly underpinning a long-established area of critical salmon habitat.
The B.C.-based geologist and founder of SedTrend Analysis Ltd., who began his career with the Geological Survey of Canada, pioneered a technique of sediment analysis in 1985 that helps engineers understand flow dynamics — the way currents, and structures built within them, affect riverbeds, beaches and sea floors.
So with a massive, $36-billion liquefied natural gas project proposed to end at Lelu Island in Chatham Sound, McLaren offered to study the entire port area to establish some baseline understanding of the port’s dramatic currents. It’s an area of seven-metre tides, the mouth of the 610-kilometre Skeena River — one of the longest undammed rivers in the world — and heavy seas, where Chatham Sound opens out into the notoriously wild Hecate Strait.
McLaren’s research, funded first by the Lax Kw’Alaams First Nation and later by the Gitanyow First Nation, was the beginning of a battle that would see him butting heads with federal bureaucrats, a Malaysian state-owned oil and gas giant and the “dynamic modelling” industry, considered the gold standard for predicting highly complex processes and interactions.
