Toronto Star

PLASTIC BOOM

Government­s help petrochemi­cal companies despite concerns over items like straws,

- DAN HEALING

Canada’s slow-growing petrochemi­cal industry is headed for its biggest surge of expansion spending in five years in 2019, thanks in large part to incentive programs by federal and provincial government­s.

The government support has angered environmen­tal groups who point out that almost 90 per cent of plastics used in this country wind up as litter or in landfills.

But it’s welcomed by the industry as a necessary factor if Canada is to keep up with its competitor­s in the United States.

Capital spending on industrial chemical industry projects in Canada this year is expected to jump by 65 per cent to $1.9 billion, the highest since $2.2 billion in 2014 and third-highest in a decade, according to a yearend members survey by the Chemistry Industry Associatio­n of Canada, which represents producers of 75 per cent of the country’s chemical products by value.

Employment is expected to rise by about 4 per cent, or 640 jobs, to 17,670.

The growth is coming despite rising concern over single-use plastics. Many jurisdicti­ons are banning plastic straws and grocery bags in reaction to scenes like the great Pacific Ocean floating garbage island between Hawaii and California and dead and dying sea creatures.

“Yes, we need plastics. What we want is to stop wasting plastics,” said Keith Brooks, programs director for Environmen­tal Defence, who says voluntary initiative­s by industry aren’t good enough.

His organizati­on is calling for a national strategy with perfor- mance standards and tougher enforcemen­t to get Canada to zero plastic waste by 2025.

Capital spending this year will come mainly from constructi­on already underway on two projects to turn petrochemi­cals produced with natural gas into plastic pellets: Inter Pipeline Ltd.’s $3.5-billion polypropyl­ene project in central Alberta and the $2-billion expansion of Nova Chemicals Corp.’s polyethyle­ne plant at Sarnia, Ont.

The former is to receive $200 million in royalty credits under a 2016 Alberta NDP government program; the latter is backed by $100 million through Ontario’s Jobs and Prosperity Fund and $35 million from Ottawa’s Strategic Investment Fund.

“On a global basis, as all jurisdicti­ons are trying to attract investment, the government­s at various levels — federal, state and provincial — play a role,” Nova CEO Todd Karran said in an interview.

Last year, Alberta announced two programs worth $2.1billion in royalty credits, grants and loans to encourage investment­s in petrochemi­cal feedstock and manufactur­ing facilities.

Meanwhile, a final investment decision is expected soon on a $4-billion polypropyl­ene project by a joint venture of Calgary-based Pembina Pipeline Corp. and a subsidiary of Kuwait Petroleum Corp., eligible for $300 million in royalty credits.

“Our made-in-Alberta plan means new projects must do the right thing for the environmen­t, and by upgrading more here at home instead of shipping our raw product south of the border, we reduce emissions and ensure Alberta is among the most responsibl­e and lowest emissions petrochemi­cal producers in the world,” provincial Energy Minister Marg McCuaig-Boyd said in a statement.

David Chappell, senior vicepresid­ent of petrochemi­cal developmen­t for Inter Pipeline, wouldn’t say if the company has applied for further government funding, but conceded it would be “crazy” not to consider it. “Even in a low-carbon future, you’re going to see huge demand for petrochemi­cals, and that’s good for the future of Alberta and the oil and gas industry.”

Canadian petrochemi­cal expansions are dwarfed by the activity south of the border.

A total of 333 new U.S. chemical industry projects using shale gas had been announced as of September, according to the American Chemistry Council. Those projects account for $202 billion (U.S.) in new capital investment and are expected to create 431,000 direct and indirect jobs by 2025.

In both Canada and the U.S., the main driver of growth is an ample and inexpensiv­e supply of natural gas-based feedstocks like methane, ethane and propane that can be transforme­d into chemical building blocks such as methanol, ammonia, ethylene and propylene, said Stephen Zinger, senior vicepresid­ent, chemicals, at consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie.

Provincial and federal government supports, and Ottawa’s recent decision to allow a 100 per cent accelerate­d capital cost allowance for new investment­s, are being noticed by investors, said Bob Masterson, CEO of the Chemistry Industry Associatio­n of Canada. “Where for most of the last decade the global chemistry community has just bypassed Canada ... now we’re back on the radar. We’ve got the resource, we’ve got the people and now we’re starting to see the favourable investment conditions at the provincial and federal level.”

The Canadian industry is well aware of its environmen­tal reputation.

The CIAC supports a target of 100 per cent of plastics packaging to be either reusable, recyclable or recovered by 2040 (and 100 per cent to be recyclable or recoverabl­e by 2030), although it acknowledg­es it can’t accomplish that without the co-operation of manufactur­ers, regulators and the general public. On Wednesday, Nova Chemicals announced it was one of 30 founding members of the internatio­nal Alliance to End Plastic Waste, which is making a combined initial commitment of $1 billion (U.S.) to find ways over the next five years to eliminate plastic waste in the environmen­t.

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 ?? JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS

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