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Power purchase agreement signed for new flare gas-to-power facility

Facility would be largest of its kind in Saskatchewan
Gas to Power facility announcement
A 20-year power purchase agreement has been announced for a 15-megawatt (MW) flare gas-to-power facility in Saskatchewan.

COLEVILLE - SaskPower, the Flying Dust First Nation (FDFN) and Genalta Power (Genalta) announced the signing of a 20-year power purchase agreement (PPA) for a 15-megawatt (MW) flare gas-to-power facility near Coleville, located in west-central Saskatchewan.

The Kopahawakenum Flare to Power Facility (KFP Facility), which represents an anticipated capital investment of $30 million, is expected to open in 2023. Kopahawakenum is the Cree name for “Kicking up the Dust.”

“This new project, which will create some 50 jobs during construction and 20 into operation, will be the largest flare gas-to-power operation in the province, generate power for around 9,000 Saskatchewan homes, and reduce emissions,” Energy and Resources Minister Bronwyn Eyre said.

“As a methane capture and commercialization project, it is another example of Saskatchewan’s world-class innovation and another step to achieving our goals under the provincial Methane Action Plan.”

Released in January 2019, the Methane Action Plan (MAP) aims to reduce methane-based gas emissions by 40 to 45 per cent, a reduction of between 4 and 4.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) annually by 2025. The KFP Facility will require about four million cubic feet of gas per day, resulting in the reduction of approximately 100,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) annually.

“This project will use flare gas that would otherwise have been emitted into the atmosphere to create low-carbon baseload electricity,” said Don Morgan, minister responsible for SaskPower.  “This is a win-win, as the oil and gas operation can generate revenue and reduce its exposure to the carbon tax, while contributing to the Province of Saskatchewan and SaskPower’s efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

“Flying Dust First Nation is very proud to participate in this business opportunity,” Flying Dust First Nation Chief Jeremy Norman said. “This project will provide much needed own source revenue to our community and membership for years to come. It has always been a goal of the FDFN to seek and create opportunities and be part of the Saskatchewan Growth Plan. We thank SaskPower, the Government of Saskatchewan, the FNPA, and our partner Genalta Power Corp. for working with FDFN in developing this project.”

“We are very excited to be moving forward with this project with our partners The Flying Dust First Nation, First Nation Power Authority and SaskPower,” Genalta Power president and CEO Paul B. Miller said. “The compressed natural gas virtual pipeline being utilized by the project will allow for the removal of flaring and venting across a wider area in the province and ensure that we are utilizing as much of the energy from a barrel of oil that is brought to the surface as possible. This solution for flare and vent gas collection for power generation will significantly reduce flare and vent volumes in this area of Saskatchewan.”

“I want to thank Flying Dust First Nation, the FNPA, and Genalta for helping lead this collaborative project from conception through to this agreement today and ultimately through to construction and operation in 2023,” Minister of Trade and Export Development and MLA for Meadow Lake Jeremy Harrison said. “Our province is a global leader in sustainable resource production and this energy facility will also create new opportunities for First Nations communities.”

The PPA was developed through an ongoing partnership between SaskPower and the First Nations Power Authority (FNPA), a not-for-profit organization that works to include Indigenous people in Saskatchewan’s power sector and achieve sustainable economic development and community benefits. SaskPower and the FNPA have signed an agreement to source 20 MW of electricity from power generation projects that use methane from oil production as the fuel source and are led by First Nations communities and businesses.

“On behalf of First Nations Power Authority, board and staff, we are proud of the work of Flying Dust First Nation and their partner, Genalta Power, to signing a PPA,” First Nations Power Authority president and CEO Guy Lonechild said. “This initial step of 15 MW towards full fulfillment of the 20 MW of flare gas power generation through the First Nations Opportunity Agreement signed between FNPA and SaskPower is indeed a major milestone.”

The project is conditionally approved under the province’s Oil and Gas Processing Investment Incentive (OGPII) and the Saskatchewan Petroleum Innovation Incentive (SPII). OGPII offers transferable oil and gas royalty/freehold production tax credits for qualified greenfield or brownfield value-added projects at a rate of 15 per cent of eligible project costs, including associated gas commercialization projects such as flare gas-to-power facilities. SPII offers transferable oil and gas royalty/freehold production tax credits for qualified innovation commercialization projects at a rate of 25 per cent of eligible project costs. Under both programs, government investment follows up-front private investment.

For more information on this project, please visit saskpower.com/projects.

 

 

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