National Post

Relaunched program aims to attract $30B in investment­s

Alberta looks to start seeding petro projects

- Geoffrey Morgan

• Alberta is relaunchin­g a program offering petrochemi­cal project grants and incentives in the hopes of attracting $ 30 billion in new investment­s over the next 10 years as it pushes to diversify its revenue streams from oil and gas royalties.

Alberta will open its redesigned Alberta Petrochemi­cals Incentive Program on Friday to replace the previous government’s Petrochemi­cal Diversific­ation Program. The new program offers companies that build petrochemi­cal plants in the province grants worth up to 12 per cent of their capital costs, rather than royalty credits that had been offered under the previous program.

The government’s goal for the program is to attract $ 30 billion in new investment, but there are no specific goals for how many projects get built in the province, Alberta’s Associate Minister Dale Nally said in an interview.

“In the last 10 years, the U. S. has realized $ 250 billion in petrochemi­cal investment. It shows the opportunit­y that’s out there. With the kind of numbers we’re talking about, it’s not an insignific­ant number and it’s substantia­l for the province, but it’s not unachievab­le,” Nally said.

The new petrochemi­cal plants would also reduce Alberta’s provincial treasury reliance on non- renewable resource royalties and add to its corporate income tax base.

Under the previous program, Pembina Pipeline Corp. and Inter Pipeline Corp. applied and received royalty credits for two multi- billion projects that would turn propane into plastic pellets used in Additional companies had also applied for funding from the provincial government for projects focused on ethylene or acrylic acid, that are key ingredient­s in a number of plastic products. Nally said companies that had applied under the previous program would have six months to determine if they’d rather have the royalty credits or the grants offered under the new program.

The provincial government is hoping the new program will attract applicatio­ns for projects that would use a range of hydrocarbo­n- derived inputs, including hydrogen. Companies interested in building fertilizer plants could also apply for grants under the program.

“T he oppor tunity for growth in this sector exists in the province and that is good news for jobs, new global- scale investment and Alberta’s economy,” Chemistry Industry Associatio­n of Canada president and CEO Bob Masterson said in a provincial government press release.

Most of the province’s existing petrochemi­cal plants are built in and around Edmonton and the program could provide a further boost to the city’s economy, if new projects are built.

“The Alberta Petrochemi­cals Incentive Program will help bring much- needed investment to the Edmonton Metropolit­an Region, diversify our petrochemi­cal sector, create jobs, and boost our economic recovery,” Edmonton Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Janet Riopel said in the same release.

 ?? Ian Kucerak / Postmedia News files ?? The new Alberta program offers companies that build petrochemi­cal plants
in the province grants worth up to 12 per cent of their capital costs.
Ian Kucerak / Postmedia News files The new Alberta program offers companies that build petrochemi­cal plants in the province grants worth up to 12 per cent of their capital costs.

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