Title: ETHANOL POLICIES, PROGRAMS AND PRODUCTION IN CANADA
1ETHANOL POLICIES, PROGRAMS AND PRODUCTION IN
CANADA
- Presented by
- Michael Vourakes
- President
- GES International
2Canadian Ethanol Production Capacity
3Kyoto Protocol
- Ratified by Canadian government 2002
- GHG emissions 94 of 1990 level
- BAU - 841m tons per year
- Kyoto 623 m tons per year
- Government plans increase production and use of
ethanol and other bio-fuels
4Feedstocks Used in Canadian Ethanol Plants
5Quebecs Incentives
- No fuel ethanol plant in Quebec just one
producing industrial ethanol - Another being built with help of federal Ethanol
Expansion Program - Will have tax exemption of .10/cents per litre
- Until 2012
6Ethanol Production Capacity
- Manitoba plant was first in Canada (1980) now
produces 10.56 m litres/year - EEP slated to finance 7 new plants that will add
780 m litres/year - 19 other plants are in planning stage
- Most eligible for provincial assistance
- Will add 1,268 m litres/year
7Ethanol Production Capacity
- Currently 252 million litres
- Fuel ethanol about 2/3
- Fuel ethanol production concentrated in SE
Ontario (72) where Commercial Alcohols has 2
plants (160 m litres/year and 23.2 m litres/year)
8Main Instruments of Federal Ethanol Expansion
Program
- Excise gasoline tax exemption
- 0.10/litre
- Imports of US produced ethanol eligible
- Ethanol Expansion
- Contingent loan guarantees (102 m)
- Public awareness (2.2 m)
- Subsidies for production facilities (73 m)
9Provincial Policies on Ethanol
- Driven mainly by characteristics of provincial
economies - Manitoba and Saskatchewan want to boost their
rural economies - Alberta has lower incentives due to importance of
oil industry - BC wishes to stimulate cellulose-based ethanol
because of forest residues
10Alberta Incentives for Ethanol
- .25 per gallon tax exemption for 5 years after
start-up of an ethanol production plant - No restriction on ethanol source
- Alberta has only one plant it exports almost
all of its production to the US
11Saskatchewan Incentives
- .10/litre tax exemption for 5 years
- Ethanol must be produced and consumed in
Saskatchewan - Ethanol Fuel Act, May 2002
- Fuel volumes must contain 2.5 ethanol by July
2004, 7.5 by April 2005 - Distributors must purchase 30 of ethanol from
small plants (lt15 m litres)
12Manitobas Incentives
- Tax exemption is . 07 per litre
- Plus .08 per litre subsidy
- Only for ethanol produced and consumed in
Manitoba - Biofuels Act requires that by September 2005, 85
of gasoline sold in province must contain 10
ethanol
13Ontarios Incentives
- Tax exemption of .09 per litre (until 2010)
- 3.65 m subsidy to Commercial Alcohols for its
Chatham plant - Use of ethanol blends in government vehicle fleet
14Feedstock
- Two main feedstocks grains and cellulose
- Most ethanol production in N. America uses corn
as feedstock - Exception is in western Canada where wheat is
dominant feedstock - Not enough heat degree days for corn
15Feedstock
- Grain based production accounts for 92 of
production capacity - Corn (73), wheat (17), barley (3)
- Agricultural and forestry waste (7)
16Iogen Corporation
- Based in Ottawa
- World leader in cellulose technology
- Demonstration plant produced 4.5 m litres per
year - April 2004 announcement
- Searching for location for commercial plant
- 1,653 tons per day of feedstock
- 204 m litres ethanol per year
17Co-Products
- Cellulose based ethanol
- Lignin (burned to produce steam)
- Grain based ethanol
- Fibre, proteins, minerals, vitamins
- Dry milling (dominant in Canadas small plants)
- Wet milling only one in Canada (Alberta)
- and is integrated with feedlot
18Ethanol Production Costs
- Ethanol plants in Canada are small
- Estimates of production costs range from .12
.24 per litre - Depend on value of feedstock
- Studies show large returns to scale
19Ethanol Production Costs by Plant Size (in US
Dollars)
Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
-
- Source Government of Manitoba (2002c)
- Â
20Concluding Note
- Increased production of ethanol will reduce GHG
production in Canada - Existing technologies do not make ethanol
manufacture profitable - Requires government assistance or regulations
- Federal and provincial governments have subsidy
programs - Much research remains to be done
21Canadas Renewable Fuel Strategy (May 2006)
22Canadian Renewable Fuel Strategy (RFS)
- Mandatory 5 renewable fuel content (ethanol and
bio-diesel) in Canadian gasoline and diesel by
2010
23Goals of the Canadian Renewable Fuel Strategy
- Reduces emissions to the environment (lower
emissions, and reduce greenhouse gases), from an
agricultural standpoint - Provides a mechanism to ensure primary producers
are partners in this growing economic opportunity - Ensures that industry is able to participate
24How will the RFS help Canadians?
- Encourage new incentives for investment in rural
areas - Provide consumers a hedge against rising
petroleum prices
25Benefits to the Canadian Economy and Environment
- 4.2 mega tonne per year reduction of GreenHouse
Gas (GHG) emissions - 14,000 new jobs created
- 1.5 billion dollar investment to build required
facilities
26Benefits to Producers
- 240 million bushel new domestic market for oil
seeds and grains produced by Canadian farmers - Higher commodity prices and less reliance on
government support - Annual need of 3.0 3.3 billion litres of
renewable fuel
27Barriers faced by Canadian producers
- Market access
- Competitiveness
- Financing
- Risk
- Regulatory Issues
28Strategy for Market Access
- 5 requirement on all fuel consumed
- Minimum requirements for ethanol and bio-diesel
- Support for E85 (85 renewable and 15 gasoline)
- Push for greater government procurement
29Strategy for Enhance Competitiveness
- Remove gas excise exemption of.10 cents per liter
(cpl) - Create a tax credit of .10 cpl for renewable
fuels (e.g. Quebec) - Support small renewable fuel producers (lt 150
million litres per year) with .03 cpl (up to 60
million litres) - Commodity credit program for new production of
.10 cpl for first twelve months
30Strategy to Improve Financing of Biofuel Plants
- Create flow through shares to make it easier to
raise equity financing (matching similar programs
for oil/gas, mining etc.) - Increase farmer equity using 100 non-repayable
matching of contributions by government up to
75,000 per farmer (max 20 million per project)
31Strategy to Reduce Risk
- Government assistance via direct capital
investment and/or provision of loan guarantees to
commercialize new technology like cellulose
ethanol - Continued funding of Research Development
efforts between government and industry
32Questions
33Gracias!
- With assistance and special thanks to
- Robin Speer,Director,Public Affairs,Canadian
Renewable Fuels Association (CFRA) - Kurt Klein Robert Romain Maria Olar Nancy
Bergeron - Professor, Department of Economics, University of
Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Alberta - Centre for Research in the Economics of
Agrifood (CREA), Laval University, Ste. Foy,
Quebec