Saturday, February 23, 2013

No more money for biodiesel plants


The federal government says it’s not going to spend any more money on subsidies to build biodiesel plants, but will honour existing commitments that will cost the treasury $1 billion by the time the program expires in 2017.

Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver sent a letter to the Canadian Renewable Fuels Association recently, denying their request to open the subsidy taps.

The government stopped taking applications in 2010, so will have about $500 million left in the funds it promised when he program expires.

It has spent $672 million so far, mainly to subsidize construction of ethanol distilleries.

The government is disappointed in the industry’s failure to take up the challenge to build enough biodiesel production capacity to meet the goal of two per cent biodiesel in diesel fuels.

Some of the plants that have been built are producing biodiesel that Canadian companies won’t use because of quality concerns, so that biodiesel is exported and Canadians are importing biodiesel to meet the two per cent mandate.

It’s likely that the biodiesel that’s exported is processed from raw materials such as restaurant grease and fat and discards from meat-packing plants. What the diesel blenders prefer is biodiesel processed from crops such as soybeans and canola.

The mandate for five per cent ethanol is being met with ease by existing distilleries. Some of them are shutting down because the corn and wheat they have been using as raw material have become too expensive, because there is more than enough ethanol on the North American market and because blenders have lost the incentives that existed a year ago to go beyond government-mandated minimums.

A number of planned biodiesel plants are on hold, including an Archer Daniel Midlands plant at Lloydminster, Alta., that could produce up to 265 million litres a year and a Great Lakes Biodiesel Inc. plant at St. Catharines, Ont., that applied for $65 million in federal subsidies.

Scott Thurlow, president of the Canadian Renewable Fuels Association, says there are enough plans ready to go if and when the federal government opens the subsidy taps, to meet the goal of 600 million litres of biodiesel per year.