Edmonton Journal

Petrochemi­cal industry will get $1-billion boost

Idea is to diversify province’s energy sector and make it more competitiv­e

- EMMA GRANEY egraney@postmedia.com twitter.com/EmmaLGrane­y

The provincial government will spend $1 billion over the next four years on the petrochemi­cal industry to try to diversify Alberta’s energy sector.

The cash will come from two streams — the second round of the petrochemi­cals diversific­ation program, for which 16 companies applied last time, and a new feedstock infrastruc­ture program.

Each will see around $500 million in funding.

The diversific­ation program will come in the form of royalty credits spread over four years starting in 2020-21. The feedstock infrastruc­ture plan will see three years of loan guarantees and grants beginning in 2020-21.

Energy Minister Margaret McCuaig-Boyd announced the bump in cash Monday in Edmonton. It comes hot on the heels of a new $1-billion program to encourage the constructi­on of up to five new partial upgrading facilities in the province. That cash, spread out over the next eight years, will also come in the form of loan guarantees and grants.

Much like the partial upgrading program, this new petrochemi­cal focus comes via the recommenda­tions of Alberta’s energy diversific­ation advisory committee.

The committee was formed after the 2016 royalty review. Its mandate was to figure out how to increase the value of Alberta’s resources and create more jobs.

It found that Alberta must be prepared for an increasing­ly volatile energy market as the world transition­s away from fossil fuels.

The new feedstock program is intended to encourage natural gas midstream projects to support liquids extraction, focusing on ethane recovery, such as a company building a straddle plant alongside a pipeline, for instance.

It will run hand-in-hand with the diversific­ation program to increase the availabili­ty of raw materials for petrochemi­cal producers.

“What we’re doing is incentiviz­ing industry to look for those opportunit­ies, extract ethane and keep it here in the province rather than shipping it out,” McCuaigBoy­d said.

What we’re doing is incentiviz­ing industry to look for those opportunit­ies, extract ethane and keep it here in the province.

Calgary-based Inter Pipeline was one of the recipients of the first round of the petrochemi­cals program funding.

It received credits for part of a $3.5-billion project near Fort Saskatchew­an which converts propane to polypropyl­ene — small plastic pellets that can be easily transporte­d within Canada and overseas.

Senior vice-president David Chappell was at Monday’s announceme­nt and said his company sees more opportunit­ies in the sector.

“Alberta does a good job of extracting oil and gas ... but we don’t do a great job of finding markets, getting to markets,” he said.

“Adding value to our resources can do that.”

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