Federated Co-operative Ltd. wants to buy $5.5M of land from City of Regina for renewable diesel plant - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 25, 2024, 10:58 PM | Calgary | -14.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Federated Co-operative Ltd. wants to buy $5.5M of land from City of Regina for renewable diesel plant

Federated Co-operative Limited hopes to build a plant next to the Co-op refinery north of the city. City councillors are set to discuss the request for a $5.48 million land sale at an executive committee meeting on Wednesday.

The plant could create 150 permanent jobs in the city

Federated Co-operative Limited is asking the City of Regina to sell a portion of land near the Co-op refinery for the purpose of building a renewable diesel plant. (Matt Duguid/CBC)

Federated Co-operative Limited hopesto buy almost $5.5 million worth of land from the City of Regina to build a renewable diesel plant.

The co-operativeis hoping the plant will be located next to the Co-op refinery north of the city.

City councillors are set to discuss the request at an executive committeemeeting on Wednesday.

If the $5.48 million sale of the land is approved, FCL says it expects to spend between $1.5 and $2 billionto develop the plant, according to a report included in the agenda for Wednesday's meeting. There would be future potential to add elements like agriculture processing services to the plant.

According to the city's analysis, renewable diesel can help reduce emissions from long-haul transport, mass urban transit and agricultural operations.

City administration has analyzed the climate impact of Federated Co-operative's requestand found "the sale of this land has no direct impact on energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions."

The city also estimatesthe plant would create around 1,500 temporary jobs in Regina during construction and over 150 jobs once the plant is built, and would add over half a billion dollars to Regina's gross domestic product every year.

However, building a plant in this area would likely mean more traffic on Inland Drive and Fleet Street, and would also need significant additional infrastructure from the city, particularly water access.

City council's executive committee meets at 9 a.m. on Wednesday.