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The Globe and Mail reports in its Wednesday edition that AltaGas is gearing up for its $500-million propane export project, hoping to breathe new life into a Northern B.C. port that has been hurt by sluggish coal shipments. The Globe's Brent Jang writes that AltaGas will begin construction on Ridley Island in the Port of Prince Rupert within weeks. Calgary-based AltaGas is forging ahead when an array of export proposals have died or sputtered in Canada, including a cancelled potash terminal and a stalled liquefied natural gas project on Ridley Island. The propane terminal is slated to be completed in the first quarter of 2019, creating nearly 250 construction jobs and employing almost 50 full-time plant workers. Exporting propane to Asia will be a natural evolution for AltaGas, which has subleased land from coal exporter Ridley Terminals Inc. AltaGas will share an existing shipping berth with the federal Crown-owned coal terminal. The mid-stream company said it has been collaborating with local first nations about exporting from their traditional territory. AltaGas is seeking a partner willing to pick up a 30-per-cent equity stake in the terminal that will cost $450-million to $500-million to build.