March 13

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Vol. 14, No. 17, Wednesday, March 13, 2019 www.LamontLeader.com

More projects for Inter Pipeline BY JOHN MATHER Two more major announcements were made last week involving Inter Pipeline Ltd., the company behind the $3.6 billion Heartland Petrochemical complex in Alberta’s Industrial Heartland. On Mar 6, Canadian Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development, Navdeep Bains, announced a commitment of $49 million to the company. The grant will help the company create 175 new jobs while securing 2,000 construction jobs for the life of the project. “Our government is stepping up to support innovation and job creation on Canada’s resource industry,” said Bains. “This investment in Inter Pipeline will create good middle class jobs, reduce the environmental impact of plastic production and open new markets and opportunities for Canadians in the oil and gas sector.” The Heartland project will take propane and produce high quality polypropylene, one of the most widely used plastics in the world for its durability and it recyclability. Currently, polypropylene is not produced in Canada. On the heels of the Federal announcement, Inter Pipeline said Mar. 7, it will build a new $600 million petrochemical project in the area to use propane derivatives to produce acrylic acid, which is used in paints and absorbent materials such as diapers. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley used the occasion to announce the province will provide $70 million in royalty tax credits for the project. “Pipelines are part of the solution to the woes of Alberta, but they’re not the only solution,” said David Chappel, senior vice president, petrochemical development for Inter Pipeline. “We need to get more value out of the product that we’re producing here, not just shipping more product out of province.” Construction is slated to begin at the completion of the Heartland Petrochemical Complex currently under construction and scheduled to be completed by 2021 The provincial credits come through the petrochemical diversification program, in which the Notley government has attempted to encourage construction of facilities that process natural gas supplies into products such as plastic pellets.

A polypropylene reactor was hoisted from its trailer Mar. 7, and secured on its anchor bolts at the Inter Pipeline Heartland Chemical Complex construction site. A Mammoet PTC-35 crane was used to lift the huge vessel. Several more vessels will be placed by the crane in coming weeks. Photo credit: Ewan Nicholson


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