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5 B.C. pulp mills get provincial aid to replace natural gas use

$70M carbon tax fund also assists natural gas industry
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Chips feed operation of Harmac pulp mill near Nanaimo. (Tom Fletcher/Black Press Media)

B.C.’s latest round of grants from the CleanBC Industry Fund pays for conversion of equipment at five pulp mills to reduce their natural gas use, while most of the rest of the $70 million goes to natural gas production facilities in Northeast B.C. to get them to switch processes to electricity.

Environment Minister George Heyman and Forests Minister Katrine Conroy announced the of the fund on Monday. The projects are funded out of carbon tax paid by B.C. industries.

Heyman said Jan. 31 that the three rounds of industry funding reduce B.C.’s total greenhouse gas emissions by six million tonnes, equivalent to taking 130,000 vehicles off the road for 10 years.

Recipients for the 2021 round include Catalyst Paper’s plants in Port Alberni and Crofton, two grants for Nanaimo Forest Products’ Harmac pulp mill, three grants for Howe Sound Pulp and Paper in Port Mellon, and one each for Mercer Celgar in Castlegar and Skookumchuck Pulp north of Kimberley.

Harmac gets $12 million to upgrade their boiler system and another $617,000 to upgrade its pulp dryer and building heating and ventilation to recover waste heat and reduce natural gas consumption. Catalyst Port Alberni ($323,100) and Skookumchuk ($843,500) get funds to improve their hog wood waste feed equipment to fire their steam boilers. Catalyst Crofton receives $5.85 million to improve efficiency of its black liquor evaporation process, reducing natural gas use for its onsite steam boilers.

Port Mellon’s pulp mill gets an upgrade to its biomass boiler ($549,000), equipment to capture bio-methanol from wastewater ($384,000) and upgrades to capture lime kiln dust ($731,250).

Mercer Celgar receives the largest non-petroleum fund of the 2021 round, $5 million for increasing biomass fuel storage at its Castlegar pulp mill.

The city of Vancouver gets $1.47 million to expand its landfill gas capture program at the municipal landfill at ÑÇÖÞÌìÌà Bog in Delta, and Newcrest’s Red Chris copper and gold mine in Northwest B.C. gets $448,243 to connect to the B.C. Hydro energy grid, disconnecting a diesel generator used to run water pumps. CertainTeed Canada gets $1.4 million for a heat exchanger on a gypsum board driver at its manufacturing site.

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The rest of the funding goes to the natural gas industry:

• ARC Resources gets $13.7 million to connect its Dawson Creek gas processing plant to the B.C. Hydro grid, retiring four gas turbine generators

• Canadian Natural Resources gets $2 million to replace 254 pneumatic methanol pumps with electric pumps powered by solar energy

• Canlin Energy gets $1.57 million to replace four natural gas compressor drivers, and another $119,000 for replace 21 wellsite methanol pumps with solar-powered pumps

• ConocoPhillips Canada receives $764,000 to capture methane previously vented and flared from 55 gas wells in Northeast B.C. Methane is the main component of natural gas.

• Crew Energy gets $103,000 to convert a gas-fired compressor at its Wilder sweet gas plant

• NorthRiver Midstream receives funding for three projects, $7.5 million to connect its Dawson Creek processing plant to the B.C. Hydro grid, $1 million for a waste heat recovery system at its Highway plant and $10 million for a carbon and acid gas compression and injection system at its McMahon gas plant near Fort St. John.



tfletcher@blackpress.ca

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