Evidence of meeting #77 for Natural Resources in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was pellet.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Paul Kariya  Senior Policy Advisor, Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative
Ning Yan  Distinguished Professor in Forest Biomaterials, As an Individual
Gordon Murray  Executive Director, Wood Pellet Association of Canada

4 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

I call the meeting to order. We're going to get under way. Thank you to everybody for accommodating the late start.

We have three witnesses who are joining us today. We have the two by video conference, and we have Ms. Yan, who will be joining us momentarily.

The procedure is that each of you will be given up to 10 minutes to make a presentation, which you can do in either official language. You will be asked questions afterward by members around the table, almost certainly in both official languages. There should be equipment available to you if you need interpretation.

From the Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative, we have Paul Kariya.

I have to ask, because I'm a hockey fan, are you any relation?

4 p.m.

Paul Kariya Senior Policy Advisor, Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative

Yes, he's named after me. He's my cousin's son.

4 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

He's named after you?

4 p.m.

Senior Policy Advisor, Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative

Paul Kariya

He's Paul T., and I'm Paul H.

4 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

How are you related?

4 p.m.

Senior Policy Advisor, Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative

Paul Kariya

He's my cousin's son.

4 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

I'm a big fan. He was part of one of the greatest Olympic goals ever.

4 p.m.

Senior Policy Advisor, Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative

Paul Kariya

He's a fantastic person and a terrific hockey player.

4 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

Yes.

I just learned that Ms. Yan, just so everybody is aware, has the honour of being the sister of Geng Tan, who is ordinarily a member of this committee but is not here today.

4 p.m.

Ning Yan Distinguished Professor in Forest Biomaterials, As an Individual

Yes.

4 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

I was going to say be very nice to her, because Geng will be back here on Monday.

4 p.m.

Distinguished Professor in Forest Biomaterials, As an Individual

Ning Yan

I'm sure Geng wants you to treat me just like everyone else.

4 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

From the Wood Pellet Association of Canada, we have Gordon Murray. I don't know any of your relatives, but I don't want you to feel left out in any way.

Mr. Kariya, why don't we start with you, sir? You can lead us off.

4 p.m.

Senior Policy Advisor, Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative

Paul Kariya

Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you, committee members.

Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you and to represent Coastal First Nations. I bring greetings from our president, Chief Marilyn Slett; our board chair and CEO, Mr. Patrick Kelly; and our whole board and leadership.

I appear before you from Vancouver on the traditional and unceded territories of the Coast Salish peoples, represented by the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh first nations.

I have divided comments into three sections: one, who the Coastal First Nations are; two, comments on the forest sector in the footprint of our nations; and three, some broader policy considerations.

The territories of the Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative member communities lie in the Great Bear Rainforest, one of the largest temperate coastal rainforest systems left on earth, and on the coastal shores of the Pacific Ocean.

CFN-GBI is an alliance of first nations with approximately 15,000 members. We are a unique organization, because representation includes various cultural and language groups—indeed, different first nations.

CFN-GBI is not the rights and title-holder; the member nations hold these. We are a 17-year-old, not-for-profit service organization created and maintained by the nations.

CFN-GBI communities have forged a rich culture in the north Pacific bioregion. The cultures, languages, and livelihoods are deeply connected to the riches of the rainforest and ocean. For at least 14,000 years, the people carefully managed an abundance of resources—ancient cedars, herring, salmon, halibut, shellfish, and more. They relied upon their knowledge of seasonal cycles to harvest land and marine resources without harming or depleting them.

Many believed these resources would last forever. They were wrong. After mere decades of over-exploitation, the forest and ocean resources of the Great Bear Rainforest and ocean have been depleted. Our region's economy has dwindled, jobs have become scarce, and the communities are challenged to survive.

The common reality of where the nations reside, obtain their identity, and need to re-establish a conservation economy has brought them together to work through CFN-GBI, the Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative.

Let me turn to some comments on forests and forestry and our nations. Our communities are working towards a coastal economy based on traditional natural resources such as fish, fisheries, and forestry. At the same time, we are exploring newer sectors, such as non-timber forest products and shellfish aquaculture.

One of our businesses, the Great Bear Rainforest Essential Oils, produces unique essential oils derived from natural conifer needles sustainably harvested in the Great Bear Rainforest region. The goal is to find culturally appropriate value-added products from the Great Bear Rainforest that would provide long-term sustainable and meaningful employment for remote communities, while at the same time protecting the forests. In 2007, Coastal First Nations began researching ways to derive essential oils from the conifer trees that grow in the reaches of the Great Bear Rainforest.

Since the signing of the Forest and Range Practices Act with British Columbia in 2003, CFN-GBI members have, to varying degrees, made progress on community economic development through the development of commercial forest tenure opportunities. Real progress has at times been frustrated by market declines, lack of access to viable harvest opportunities, and provincial policies that tend to disadvantage small tenure holders, first nations or otherwise.

However, along the way, forestry operational planning, business acumen, and working relationships with other licensees in the private sector have been developed. Recent upturns in markets and initiation of a tenure recharting process, if successful, will help to create stability for operational planning and investment. This, coupled with investment in value-added and local service sector opportunities, creates potential to reinvigorate the coastal forest sector.

The nations in B.C. are committed to explore and seek to identify and implement policies and measures that improve the economic viability of small first nation and coastal community forest tenures.

We seek to identify ancillary services and value-added forestry business opportunities, like the one I mentioned, that can be developed in CFN communities and, with industry, develop a strategic plan to realize them.

We seek to identify gaps and needed investments in regional forestry-related transportation infrastructure, and so forth, and to jointly approach the federal government to develop and implement a regional infrastructure development plan.

In 2016, after years of negotiations, the nations entered into the Great Bear Rainforest agreement and in 2009 signed the first reconciliation protocol with the Government of British Columbia. Under that protocol, having protected the forest to date, CFN has seen an outcome of a far-reaching carbon credit opportunity. Today CFN is the largest carbon credit marketer in Canada through the Great Bear Carbon Credit Limited Partnership. We have sold some 2.6 million tons over the past six years, and by the end of this year, we expect to be managing well over a million tons of carbon offsets per year.

I will move on to policy considerations.

Based on implementing UNDRIP and mindful of a new reconciliation priority, bilateral engagement between Coastal First Nations and Canada has brought CFN members in Canada to engage in two major reconciliation framework negotiations. The first is on oceans management and the second is on fisheries resources.

Our chiefs, Minister LeBlanc, and Minister Bennett signed a reconciliation framework agreement on fisheries resources on October 11, 2017. Now the goal is for cabinet to endorse a mandate with real funding investment to give meaning to reconciling and repatriating fish and fisheries to the rights and title-holders.

CFN-GBI chiefs and other nations in the north Pacific shelf region are currently engaged in a government-to-government working group to achieve a similar oceans protection and management reconciliation framework agreement. Protecting ocean resources, ensuring safe shipping, engaging the people who protect and maintain Canada's sovereignty on the coast, and combatting the effects and impact of climate change are priorities.

The forest sector is very important to member first nations for both traditional and new value-added forestry. It is a key topic as we negotiate the next phases of reconciliation with the Government of British Columbia. For CFN-GBI nations, at the heart of the matter is that having made significant strides to protect the environment, they need to fashion a sustainable economy that supports healthy communities and human well-being.

Traditional and new forestry play a big role in this, as do fish and fisheries, tourism, and potential opportunities in clean energy. The key is sustainability.

Thank you very much.

4:10 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

Thank you very much.

Ms. Yan, why don't you take the floor?

4:10 p.m.

Distinguished Professor in Forest Biomaterials, As an Individual

Ning Yan

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I'd like to thank the committee for the opportunity to present my views on secondary supply chain products in the forest sector in Canada.

The forest sector contributes significantly to the social and economic prosperity of Canada. With the recent shifts in market demand, increasing trade barriers, and higher competitive pressure for traditional forest products, there is an urgent need for the sector to revitalize and transform to ensure that it remains an economic engine of Canada in the future. Meanwhile, with the societal movement towards higher sustainability, the Canadian forest sector has a unique opportunity to become a leader in supplying innovative, value-added, and green products from our responsibly managed forest in the new bioeconomy.

Being a scientist and an engineer with more than 20 years of industrial and academic experience in the forest sector as well as in conducting research and development on wood and paper products as well as forest biomaterials and biochemicals, I'm deeply engaged in and passionate about this transformation. My career in the forest sector started when I was a Ph.D. student at the pulp and paper centre in the University of Toronto in 1993 almost 25 years ago. After obtaining my Ph.D. degree in chemical engineering in 1997, I worked as a research scientist for two years at the Pulp and Paper Research Institute of Canada, formerly Paprican, in Pointe-Claire, which is now part of FPInnovations.

I also worked as a research scientist on digital printing media for Xerox Corporation in the United States prior to becoming a faculty member in the faculty of forestry at the University of Toronto in 2001. Additionally, during my sabbatical leave from the university I was a visiting scientist at Innventia in Sweden, one of the largest forest products research institutes in Europe, which is now a division of RISE Bioeconomy. Currently I'm a full professor at the department of chemical engineering and applied chemistry and I hold a distinguished professorship in forest biomaterials engineering and an endowed chair in value-added wood and composite at the University of Toronto. Besides research, I also teach graduate and undergraduate courses on forest products, biomaterials, and biocomposites.

The research program I established focuses on developing value-added biocomposites and functional materials using nanocellulose and wood fibres and on synthesizing biochemicals using lignin and bark with the aim of replacing petroleum-derived products.

In particular, I'm recognized as a leader in developing bark biorefinery technologies. Bark is a low-value residue generated from sawmill and pulp mill operations and is available in large quantities in Canada. Bark contains all major chemicals found in wood, such as cellulose, lignin, and hemicellulose, but bark also contains extractives. Currently bark does not have high-value applications. Mostly it's used as part of low-grade hog fuel burnt for heat recovery.

Bark presents an untapped opportunity for value generation. My research team has developed an extraction process to obtain biocompounds from bark; value-added bark-based adhesives for gluing particleboard, OSB, and plywood; and bark-based polyols and polyurethane foams that can be used in the construction and auto sectors. We have demonstrated at the lab and pilot scale that these bark-based biochemicals perform as well as their petro-derived counterparts do. These biochemical products could potentially provide higher economic return to forest companies by using a low-value residue stream as the raw material while allowing chemical companies to add renewable content to their products. I'm working on moving these technologies out of the university labs to advance further towards commercialization.

As an academic professor, today I would like to talk about the idea of building a vibrant innovation ecosystem that can directly support and accelerate the transformation of the secondary forest products sector. I'd like to talk about building a forest products innovation value chain to facilitate the translation of university research into practice.

One key aspect of a successful innovation ecosystem is the easy flow of ideas, allowing rapid transfer of innovation from university to industry.

Canada is recognized as a leader in forest products research. Universities have generated an abundance of innovative product ideas and technologies. These ideas are the result of publicly funded research activities carried out by faculties and students. However, success in industry uptake of these technologies has been limited. Significant barriers exist for university researchers to commercialize their technologies and products in the forest sector.

Usually, innovations and discoveries at universities are at an early stage and are high-risk ventures with a significant uncertainty for commercialization. Some may only target niche applications. Others may be markets that are unfamiliar to the forest sector. This is particularly challenging, given that the forest sector has traditionally been a capital-intensive and large-commodity-based player.

It becomes even more difficult when the receptor capacity of the forest industry is shrinking. Fewer forest products companies are in operation today, due to a large number of mill closures in recent years. As well, the significant challenge in accessing capital for start-ups in this sector creates major roadblocks in pursuing commercialization.

Another important feature that a fully functional innovation ecosystem has, besides the free flow of ideas and easy access to capital, is its strong innovation capacity. At the universities, we need to train young people with not only sound scientific knowledge about forest product materials but also expose them to entrepreneurial skills so they can be the driving force for innovation and commercialization for the sector.

However, we also need industry to employ more highly trained post-graduates to build up the innovation capacity that was largely lost due to the economic downturn. This would help with the uptake of new ideas and technologies.

An additional important factor that allows for building full innovation capacity is to promote equity and diversity and to empower more women, minorities, and indigenous people to take up senior leadership positions in industry and academia in all areas of the innovation ecosystem.

To conclude, innovation will be the pathway to help the forest sector be a leader in the emerging bioeconomy and stay competitive in the global marketplace. A vibrant innovation ecosystem should allow innovative product ideas, whether large or small, early or late stage, to move easily out of universities to form an innovation pipeline.

I would like to suggest to the committee to recommend the federal government put a mechanism in place to close the gaps in the innovation value chain for the forest products sector in Canada. Government can help provide university researchers with access to investment capital to further incubate and de-risk their ideas to lower the barrier for uptake by the industry.

Specifically, government is recommended to put policies and initiatives in place to, first, foster a healthy blend of small bets, large bets, and start-ups in the forest sector in Canada; second, enhance innovation capacities, both in training of the young leaders of tomorrow in universities and in addressing the lack of innovation capacity in the industry; and third, promote equity and diversity in senior leadership positions in industry and academia to fully energize the workforce.

I hope that with the innovation ecosystem, Canada will become a global bioeconomy powerhouse in forest products innovation and commercialization, with a strong, transformed, and competitive forest products industry, a powerhouse that will provide well-paid jobs and growing and fulfilling careers for young people, much like Silicon Valley did for high-tech innovations in the south, and at the same time contribute strongly to global stability and climate change mitigation.

Finally, I'd like to thank the committee for the invitation to appear as a witness today.

4:20 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

Thank you very much. Your brother would be very proud of you.

Mr. Murray, we move over to you.

November 29th, 2017 / 4:20 p.m.

Gordon Murray Executive Director, Wood Pellet Association of Canada

Thank you, and thanks to the committee for giving me the opportunity to discuss Canada's wood pellet sector.

What I would like to touch on today is how the wood pellet sector fits within Canada's forest industry. I'd like to give you some basic information about wood pellets and some statistics about the global and Canadian wood pellet industry. I'll also tell you about the opportunity to repurpose coal power plants in Canada to use wood pellets and how wood pellets could be used more for domestic heating opportunities in Canada as well.

To put the wood pellet sector into perspective, Canada's annual log harvest fluctuates a little from year to year, but on average it's about 130 million tonnes of trees harvested. Out of that, about five million tonnes are used to make wood pellets. That's about 4% of Canada's harvest that goes towards wood pellets, although the revenue is very much less.

Total forest products revenue in Canada is around $60 billion per year. Revenue from wood pellets is about $300 million. It's only about one half of 1% of the total forest products revenue. We're providing around 2,000 jobs in production plants, fibre procurement, transportation, and terminal operations at the ports.

We have 44 pellet plants in Canada. About 70% of the production is located in British Columbia, and about 30% is in Quebec and the Atlantic provinces. There is some production also in the prairie provinces and central Canada.

Notably, annual capacity is about four million tonnes, of which one million tonnes, or 25%, was built just in the last 18 months. We have another 400,000 tonnes of capacity under construction at the moment, so it's a growing sector.

Wood pellets are a renewable biofuel, a solid biofuel, made from compressed wood fibre. During the process, the fibre is made into small particles and then put under high pressure. The heat and the pressure cause the lignin to liquefy. The pellets are then exposed to cool air and form into a pelletized shape. There are no adhesives or additives, so it's just pure wood fibre.

The raw material we use was formerly wasted. It used to be landfilled or burned in beehive burners. We're using sawdust shavings out of planer mills. We go in after the log harvesting operations and use low-grade material that has been left behind on the roadside after logging.

Globally, roughly half of the wood pellet supply is used for power generation, normally as a replacement for coal in coal power plants. It is also used for heat and hot water through residential furnaces, boiler systems, and stoves.

The pellet industry has grown tremendously. We started in about 1995 at zero and have grown at about 14% per year. Global production right now is about 30 million tonnes, with a 14% annual growth for the last 20 years or so, which we think is fairly impressive.

Turning to export destinations, last year we shipped 1.6 million tonnes to the United Kingdom, all for power generation. We're also shipping into Belgium, Japan, and South Korea—again all for power generation—as well as into the U.S. and Italy for domestic heating.

Most of the pellets that are exported from Canada, about 90%, come out of British Columbia, and most of that ends up going down through the Panama Canal and across into central Europe or the United Kingdom. We also ship west to Japan. Europe makes up about half of global wood pellet production. Also, the U.S. is a very large producer. Canada is the third-largest producing region globally, followed by, surprisingly, Vietnam, Russia, and then all other countries.

In terms of consumption, about 80% of all wood pellets that are consumed globally are consumed in Europe, and about 12% in North America, 2% in Russia, and about 8% in Asia.

About a year ago, Canada announced its intention to phase out coal power. We have coal-powered plants in Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. Coal already has been phased out in Ontario, while in Alberta it makes up 55% of the energy mix. In Saskatchewan it's 44%, in New Brunswick 13%, and in Nova Scotia 60%. When coal is phased out, a large number of power plants will still have life left in them and potentially will be stranded assets. We'd like to see Canada follow what's being done in Europe and Asia and repurpose those coal-powered plants to use wood pellets, which are a renewable carbon-neutral fuel.

The benefits of wood pellets are that they can be ground into a small powder similar to coal, and they're dry, handle easily, and flow easily. They have an energy density similar to that of lignite coal. You can use much of the same equipment found in coal-powered plants. Unlike wind and solar energy, bioenergy is dispatchable, which means that it's available on demand and can be used for balancing and for peaking power. It has lower greenhouse gas emissions than you get from coal or natural gas: lower nitrous oxides, lower sulphur oxides, lower heavy metals.

Also, there's a very modest cost to convert Canada's coal-powered plants. Already, in Ontario, OPG has converted two plants in northwest Ontario, in Atikokan and Thunder Bay. Both of those are operating successfully on wood pellets now.

On the opportunity in the heating sector, in Canada we use almost 2,700 petajoules of energy for commercial and institutional heat and to provide residential heat and hot water. About 50% of that is fuelled by natural gas in Canada, but about half of Canadian homes and businesses do not have gas access, and the main alternatives are electricity and oil.

We took some examples of costs from Ontario. Natural gas is the lowest-cost fuel, but wood pellets are significantly lower-cost than heating oil or electricity. By converting homes, businesses, and institutions to wood pellets, using modern, very efficient appliances, there's an opportunity both to lower greenhouse gas emissions and to reduce heating costs in Canada.

To talk about the magnitude of the opportunity, Canada uses around a trillion gigajoules of energy for heat and hot water per year. That's equivalent to about 71 million tonnes of wood pellets. Canada right now is producing only around 2.7 million tonnes. It's just a tiny fraction of the potential for our industry to grow.

I did want to mention the support we get from the federal government for our industry. We work closely with Natural Resources Canada. We also work with the trade commissioners in many foreign countries. Through Natural Resources Canada's expanding market opportunities program, we get assistance in attending conferences and trade missions, in working on sustainability certification for market access, in quality certification for promoting our products in other countries, in addressing trade barriers that come up from time to time, in working on issues to do with shipping and logistics, in pellet standards, in phytosanitary issues, and in new types of products. I just wanted to mention that the expanding market opportunities program through NRCan is extremely important to us, and we very much appreciate the co-operation we get there.

To conclude, Canada's pellet industry is growing, thanks mainly to demand from Europe and Asia. We see that repurposing pulverized-coal power plants for co-firing or dedicated firing with wood pellets is proven and widely used in many countries. We think there's an opportunity for Canada to adopt this approach more widely. There's a huge opportunity to increase the use of wood pellets for domestic heating in Canada.

Thank you to the committee for this opportunity.

4:30 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal James Maloney

Thank you, Mr. Murray.

Mr. Harvey, the floor is yours.

4:30 p.m.

Liberal

TJ Harvey Liberal Tobique—Mactaquac, NB

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

First of all, thank you to all the witnesses for being here today.

I'll start with you, Mr. Murray. In your presentation you talked about converting coal-fired plants over to wood pellets. How widely adopted has that been? What do you think the major roadblocks would be to widespread expansion of the utilization of wood pellets to replace coal?

4:30 p.m.

Executive Director, Wood Pellet Association of Canada

Gordon Murray

In North America and Asia it's a very well-established practice. We have power plants in the United Kingdom, Denmark, the Netherlands. It's very mainstream.

The cost to convert a plant is quite minimal. You just need to have covered storage and separate conveyers and change out some of the grinding and burner systems. The rest of the power plant stays the same. The technical risk is zero. There's no loss of efficiency in the plant.

Really, the main barrier is that wood pellets cost more than coal. There needs to be a policy framework to support it. Each country does it a little differently. The way it's working in Europe and Asia is that there are green certificates or renewable portfolio standards or mandates or taxes—something to raise the cost of coal that makes it possible to use wood pellets.

We've talked to a number of the power utilities in Canada. Ontario Power Generation is sold on it. They've converted two plants and have had great success, but the other plants.... They're traditional industries. They're cautious. They're still waiting for the provincial and federal regulatory environment to become more clear before they embark on the change.

4:35 p.m.

Liberal

TJ Harvey Liberal Tobique—Mactaquac, NB

In terms of the widespread adoption of this type of technology, do you think there's an opportunity on a broad scale to use alternative fibre sources along with wood fibre to reduce the amount of total gross product that has to come from wood fibre? For example, it could be combined with reed canarygrass or another fibre source—hemp, potentially—to make a combined pellet that would still have significant heating potential but would reduce the amount of fibre content that has to come from forestry, especially in jurisdictions that don't have as much of that readily available fibre as others.

4:35 p.m.

Executive Director, Wood Pellet Association of Canada

Gordon Murray

There is an opportunity to use agricultural by-products, such as grasses, hay, and straw. The difficulty is that they tend to have a higher amount of chlorine in them, which causes corrosion in the boiler systems. They also have a higher amount of ash, which causes some disposal problems. It tends to be a bit more difficult to collect that material.

We're certainly supportive of trying to use it. Where straw or an agricultural type of pellet is used, it is usually at a lower proportion. Usually some wood has to be mixed into it to keep the ash property of the fuel down, but definitely there is an opportunity to use that agricultural biomass.

4:35 p.m.

Liberal

TJ Harvey Liberal Tobique—Mactaquac, NB

Mr. Kariya, could you elaborate a little bit on where you think the biggest potential for growth would be for Coastal First Nations in regard to secondary manufacturing? Where do you see, through your organization, the opportunity?

4:35 p.m.

Senior Policy Advisor, Coastal First Nations Great Bear Initiative

Paul Kariya

That's a good question.

We have licences amongst the nations we represent, but they're finding that it's difficult to make a dollar in traditional forestry. While traditional forestry is going to remain important, I don't see it as being a growth area.

We have essential oils and other secondary manufacturing. Where the harvest occurs—it's really a cedar market—it's very difficult to do much there, but here will be a role to be played.

I think that right now the best value for our nations is probably in carbon credits. Saving those forests and reducing the annual allowable cut can yield a significant carbon credit that can be marketed. We sell on the market. We have a buyer in the Government of British Columbia, and we're hoping the Government of Canada will become a buyer. We're hopeful that we can get to other jurisdictions. Carbon credit from leaving the trees there, in situ, is important for us.