Times Colonist

Airlines, shippers pitch federal government on boosting sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture funding

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

MONTREAL — Airlines and marine shippers have asked Ottawa to beef up funding for sustainabl­e transport, money they hope will flow toward green supply chains and upgrades to existing infrastruc­ture.

Tax credits, loans and grants are essential to help companies reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and keep pace with other nations’ transporta­tion networks, according to a pair of transporta­tion groups ahead of the federal budget set to be tabled April 16.

Investors and would-be suppliers need incentives to start churning out sustainabl­e aviation fuel (SAF) — not a drop of which is produced domestical­ly — to match new programs in the United States that aim to cut airplane pollution, the National Airlines Council of Canada says.

“Airlines have sent very clear demand signals they will buy every drop of SAF produced, and yet what’s missing from the equation is any sort of federal incentive or support, unlike most other western countries, including the U.S.,” CEO Jeff Morrison said in an interview.

Typically derived from used cooking oils, animal fats or organic waste, green jet fuel shaves off about 80 per cent of a plane’s emissions.

The federal government has set a goal of 10 per cent green jet fuel use by 2030. Last year, it pledged $350 million to support decarboniz­ation of the aerospace sector, establishi­ng a national network that backs research and developmen­t projects ranging from alternativ­e fuels to aircraft design. But the blueprint offered none of the manufactur­ing carrots that carriers were demanding, Morrison said.

Airlines have two main requests they believe will foster fuel-making factories and longterm output by producers: an investment tax credit at a rate of 50 per cent on manufactur­ing facilities and a production tax credit with a 10-year horizon — on par with an incentive south of the border.

U.S. producers are already eligible for a tax credit of up to $1.75 US per gallon (3.8 litres) under the Inflation Reduction Act.

Meanwhile, the Chamber of Marine Commerce says both a green shipping corridor program launched last year and a seven-year-old National Trade Corridor Fund need a big top-up. Electrific­ation of ports, whose equipment runs mainly on fos sil fuels, is one example of how cash could be funnelled toward emissions reduction.

If such efforts aren’t undertaken, U.S. ports could start to draw shippers away from Canadian terminals, warned chamber CEO Bruce Burrows, who pointed to cargo vessels’ selfunload­ing conveyor systems, which are “very power-hungry.”

“They run off fuel on the ship, those systems, which have generators and then power up the conveyor belts,” he noted.

“To electrify all of that by plugging into an electrical grid on shore, it’s just like taking your vacuum cleaner up to the dock and then you plug it into someone’s plug on the shore and you use their electricit­y,” he said. “You’re going to have to pay for it, but it’ll be much more efficient, cost-effective and no GHGs.”

The government’s $165.4-million green shipping corridor program, which kicked off in December, looks to develop clean fuels and technologi­es at major ports as well as vessels that run on green hydrogen or advanced biofuels.

The federal government also administer­s a $4.6-billion program to bolster a variety of transporta­tion infrastruc­ture. Given a good grade overall by auditor general Karen Hogan last month, the National Trade Corridors Fund was launched in 2017 in an effort to strengthen the country’s network of roads, rails, airports and seaports by 2028. The projects by municipal and provincial government­s as well as private companies range from routine street upgrades to multibilli­on-dollar port terminals.

But airlines and shippers want even more money for infrastruc­ture improvemen­t projects, partly to keep up with the funding tsunami unleashed south of the border by the Biden administra­tion’s $1.2-trillion US infrastruc­ture bill in 2021.

The airlines council, which represents four of the country’s biggest carriers including Air Canada and WestJet, hopes the government will allow airports to “reinvest” the rent they pay Ottawa into airport upgrades, on top of making them eligible to apply for infrastruc­ture programs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada