For the past several years, the Northwest has been ground zero in a debate over whether to build a trio of gas-to-methanol facilities that would be among the largest petrochemical plants in the world. It’s a $5.2 billion venture by the Chinese government that would fundamentally alter the Northwest’s economy and environment. Designed to use North American natural resources to fuel Chinese manufacturing, the project backers are looking for billions of dollars in public subsidies that would cost Northwest taxpayers and put public coffers at risk.
Given what’s at stake, it’s worth examining the books to see who benefits—and who’s really paying.
“Northwest” Innovation for China’s benefit
The company behind the methanol proposals, NW Innovation Works (NWIW), is an arm of primary investor Shanghai Bi Ke Clean Energy Technology, which is owned by the Chinese Academy of Science Holdings. Through these subsidiaries, the Chinese government is prepared to funnel billions of dollars into constructing the missing link in a resource chain: fracked gas from Canada and the US Rockies to be delivered via pipeline to power- and water-hungry petrochemical refineries in Oregon and Washington. These facilities would convert the gas into liquid methanol, load it onto tanker vessels for a trans-Pacific voyage, and deliver it to Chinese factories for use in making plastics and vehicle fuels.
Large-scale foreign investment in the Northwest might sound like a good thing. But a closer look at the scheme reveals that, as with most proposals for investment in Northwest fossil fuel infrastructure these days, the region is neither the instigator nor the intended beneficiary. Situated between huge reserves of cheap North American gas and overseas markets hungry for cheap, dirty energy, Cascadia is simply in the way.
Yet the project backers are asking the region to underwrite the proposal.
American taxpayers to subsidize China’s project
The proposed Kalama facility has already come under scrutiny for exposing American taxpayers to billions of dollars in potential risk. In order to finance construction of the refinery and port terminal on the Columbia River, NWIW has applied for more than $2 billion in loan guarantees from the US Department of Energy—meaning the federal government would ultimately be on the hook if the company is unable to repay the loans. The Port of Kalama is also asking for tens of millions of dollars in federal grants and loans to fund new infrastructure to support the methanol plant. (At least one of these requests, an $11 million grant to underwrite new roads and a dock, was denied by the US Transportation Department in December 2018.)
The project also appears to be benefiting from public employee pensions and retirement funds, as previously documented by Sightline. The Washington State Investment Board voted in December 2015 to invest $400 million in public funds into a New York-based private equity firm called Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners. The investment accounts for more than 11 percent of Stonepeak’s “Infrastructure Fund II.” According to the US Department of Energy loan guarantee application, Stonepeak is the only other investor in NWIW other than the Chinese government. That means Washington public employees are risking a portion of their pension funds on the profitability of a methanol plant to boost China’s economy.
China’s project will avoid taxes
Although the public is underwriting a project to benefit China’s economy, the project backers are keen to exploit every loophole they can to avoid paying taxes. Experts estimate that the Kalama project would avoid $143 million in state and local taxes under current state law.
NWIW is proposing to build and operate in Cowlitz County, a location eligible for state sales and use tax deferment, thanks to its status as a “high unemployment county.” The loophole, meant to stimulate job growth, would defer (and ultimately waive) state sales and use taxes on qualifying machinery, equipment, and construction costs. NWIW could divert and pocket would-be tax revenue on computers, manufacturing components, and even labor and services for building. Another loophole would allow up to 80 percent of initial spending to be exempted from sales and use tax, as well as installation and routine maintenance of equipment and machinery.
In concrete figures, construction costs at Kalama are estimated at $1.8 billion, yet only around a third of that would be subject to Washington sales and use taxes. The official environmental analysis predicts the project’s construction would generate a paltry $47.5 million in retail sales tax for the state— 2.6 percent of the total construction costs. Just $7.4 million would stay in Cowlitz County—a return to local taxpayers of 0.4 percent.
Plus, NWIW won’t pay sales or use tax on the methanol it produces because all of it will be exported to China. That’s owing to another Washington tax loophole providing that sales or use taxes are not collected on goods manufactured here but exported outside of the state.
Now what?
The project’s boosters like to argue that methanol produced at Kalama would be cleaner than some other types of methanol—a claim that is hotly contested by opponents. The scale of the project is staggering and it yields other risks too.
- It would be the largest methanol-producing facility in the world
- It would use more gas than all of Cascadia’s largest cities combined
- Require an additional 100 megawatts of power from the region’s electricity grid
- Generate steam plumes longer than Mount St. Helens’ 8,633-foot height.
It’s well-known that petrochemical sites are inherently dangerous—and potentially costly. Consider the unknown potential cleanup costs should something go wrong on the banks of the Columbia, where some 72 million gallons of methanol would be stored on soil with a moderate to high risk of liquefying in the event of an earthquake. Add it to the tabulation we already know about: that NWIW is financing the project with public funds, that the Port of Kalama is angling for taxpayer money in the form of grants and loans, and that the Department of Energy may pledge to put up billions in taxpayer money as a guarantee of the project financial health.
The first of NWIW’s methanol projects, slated for Tacoma, Washington, died in 2016 in the face of withering public opposition. The second, in Clatskanie, Oregon, appears to be on hold. The third, in Kalama, Washington, on the Columbia River, is now undergoing review.
The public can submit comments on the project to the Port of Kalama until December 28. After that, public agencies will continue their review of the project to decide whether the benefits outweigh the costs.
Thanks to Alyse Nelson, who contributed research to this article.
Avi
I am against the methanol plan!
I lived in kalama for 17 years and love this place… invest in renewable green anergy instead….Please think about our kids and their future.
Peace
Avi Haviv
Joanne Fitzwilson
Everybody who lives anywhere on the Columbia River should have a vote. Can they give a 100% guarantee the river would never be harmed. I doubt they can and therefore, it is a big NO.
Why are we going backwards with energy?
Why is the Pacific NW now being treated like a 3rd world country?
Laura Bauer
I cannot figure out any plausible scenario where this methanol plant fits in Governor Inslee’s greener Washington plan or in his quest for world wide carbon caps. Yet, he has whole heartedly supported this project from its early stages. It infuriates me that he supports this monstrosity of a private industry. At the same time, he develops a plan for our power plants to reduce emissions at great expense to the state’s residents. This plant will use more natural gas each day than all power plants in the state combined. The statements that this a “greener” plant that will reduce emissions is ludicrous. There are no emissions in my community right now. There will be if this is built.
Chris Turner
From the beginning of this project, Northwest Innovation Works has not provided the complete details about this methanol refinery. It is being built on property that is not sufficient to construct the infrastructure necessary for proper operation of the world’s largest refinery. The proposed Wastewater system is in shambles. NWIW claims Zero Liquid Discharge of wastewater to the Columbia River, but lacks the acreage to avoid discharges to the river. The boiler/stack used to dry solid waste has been removed from the site plan. Infrastructure still remains in the Shoreline District. NWIW has had 6 years to design/plan for soil stabilization. Yet, as of today, has not provided any solutions. Major permits have been issued based on an incomplete FEIS which is still under appeal. The Supplemental EIS leaves huge holes in the study of cradle to grave GHG emissions required by the Shoreline Board. This entire project is unprofessional, at best.
Bill Willis
I’ve lived a mile from the building site for over 20 years. I can’t wait for construction to begin as reading opponents comments has gotten so old. Nothing relevant for years now. Looking forward to seeing people employed and property taxes going down. Oh, and $47 million is as lot better than $0.
Don Steinke
Bill Willis
This may be new to you:
There are places in American known as cancer alleys.
Those places are regulated by the same EPA that is in charge of air pollution in Cowlitz and Clark Counties. The EPA is well known for setting low standards and being slow to enforce them.
As we drove through Kalama at 5:30 pm, on Dec 27, 2018, the stench gave my wife a headache.
Your EIS and your SEIS:
Assumed the EPA standards were protective.
They assumed the Trump administration would not weaken them
They assumed enforcement would be good, and yet there was an awful upset-condition in Kalama as I drove through.
The EPA gives permits to cancer alleys. Ask Ecology to start over and be the lead agency.
Gary Wallace
I was born in Cowlitz County and now reside in Kalama. I have attended Port of Kalama Commissioner meetings, with dozens of other community members, from the beginning of this “too good to be true” project. After the December 13th public hearing, it was obvious that the majority of local, county and regional elected officials are in favor of this boondoggle because of the purported tax monies and the everchanging number of employees. But, the overwhelming majority of the attendees wore red shirts indicating their staunch, scientifically researched and supported opposition. It was a lesson in the government officials not following the will of the people and those same officials telling you (us) that they are within the parameters to soil the airshed we all live in while they ignore their sworn oaths to protect and promote the “public good”—health and financial well-being specifically in this circumstance.
NWIW has the “we will offer your school and fire districts money and even offer schooling for 20 possible applicants” approach. To the Chinese this is called “business as usual”, here we call it bribery. NWIW predicates their claim of global reduction in total GHGs if this refinery is permitted on the actions of the Chinese diminishing their consumption of dirty coal. This statement has no validity.
To predicate any contract or permits based on this fallacious reasoning that an outside party will do something if the unrelated contract/proposal parties agree to sign a deal is absurd.
NWIW is grasping at straws. When the parent company spokesperson proclaims this methanol will (now) also be used for fuels in vehicles. then the application should thrown-out and a new one, reflecting the change in stated usage be submitted for the correct taxing of the commodity for fuel.
The history brought to NWIW by one of the American team, V. Godley, should sound all of the alarms and sirens to tear away the façade portrayed by NWIW. Mr. Godley stated to me directly in a small face-to-face meeting in Kalama,
that it is his personal goal to “sail away into the sunset on his yacht in the Caribbean within 2 years” after the permitting was complete. This demonstrated to me that he has no desire to improve our community—-he was leaving ASAP.
The history I speak of is from his involvement at the Port of Pocatello, ID.
He does not want what is best for Kalama, Cowlitz County, the State or the world; he wants tax-free port project public money that NWIW to “just achieve his dream”. . . too bad; NOT HAPPENING. There is more to this project than a refinery. There is also eminent domain abuse, the desire by the Port of Kalama to get a gas-line to feed its new Spencer Creek Business Park; the sand-pile without clients. This endeavor has a lot of expense to cover. So when NWIW pays all those taxes (the ones they are trying to avoid) the Port won’t be financially strapped.
Again, NWIW promised to finance the entire project without our money; they HAD backers. . . that backed-out. Now they spend what money they have on “greasing the skids”. This will be good for you—–believe us, said the person offering the apple.
So, do you believe them now?