Americas > North America > Canada > Chilean Energy minister Jorge Bunster

Canada: Chilean Energy minister Jorge Bunster

2013/01/14

Chilean Energy minister Jorge Bunster regretted on Friday Methanex Canada announcement on its decision to idle operations in Chile in March due to lack of adequate natural gas supply. The company stated that it does not have sufficient feedstock to keep the plant in operation given the natural gas supply challenges.

The company is operating one plant in Punta Arenas, extreme south of Chile at low operating rates and it expects the plant to produce less than 5% of its entire output in 2013.
“We know the that natural gas production in Magallanes region has been declining and the Methanex project is based on an abundant provision of natural gas and they will have to assess the convenience of these operations”, said Bunster.
“Obviously we would like them to remain but it will amount depend if we can find the necessary production and reserves of natural gas” he added. “Unfortunately we are not an oil or gas producing country”.
Methanex released its third-quarter 2012 results in October 2012 and reported adjusted earnings of 38 cents per share in the quarter compared with 43 cents per share registered in the same period last year.
The Vancouver based company continues initiatives to increase production in New Zealand and Medicine Hat units and evolution in the Louisiana project, and believes it has the potential to increase its operating capacity by nearly 2 million tons over the next two years.
The company, in November 2012, received the necessary air permits from the National of Louisiana and the Environmental Protection Agency to build and operate its one million ton-methanol project in Louisiana.
The company believes that its healthy financial position, strong world supply network and competitive-cost position will strengthen its position as the world leader in the methanol industry and enable it to continue to deliver incremental returns to shareholders.
But the announcement comes as from presently on a further blow for Punta Arenas since the methanol complex had become the major industrial investment of the region in the last fifteen years.
“Because of the continued challenges in the provision of natural gas, we estimate we will not have a sufficient supply to keep our plant in Punta Arenas operational during the southern hemisphere winter. Our current expectations are that the operation of our plant in Cabo Negro could be re-launched sometime later in the year”, said Methanex corporation CEO John Floren in a release.

Related Articles
  • Climate change laws around the world

    2017/05/14 There has been a 20-fold increase in the number of global climate change laws since 1997, according to the most comprehensive database of relevant policy and legislation. The database, produced by the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment and the Sabin Center on Climate Change Law, includes more than 1,200 relevant policies across 164 countries, which account for 95% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Canada Economic Oulook Continued resilience with one major risk

    2017/05/08 Canada Canadian Economy to Improve in 2017 after a Resilient 2016
  • Neoliberal Machinations: Ontario’s Economic Austerity Government Sets “Basic Income” Trap

    2016/11/23 The Ontario Government’s Adviser on Basic Income (BI), Hugh Segal, has released his much heralded discussion paper, “Finding a Better Way,” that sets out his proposals for a lengthy BI pilot project. If the experiment he advocates is put into effect, it will run parallel to the deliberations of a Security Reform Working Group that will be considering changes to the present social assistance system in the province, rather than replacement to it.
  • Towards NAFTA-EU Economic Integration?

    2016/11/23 The ratification of the CETA agreement is imminent, with far-reaching economic and social implications. France’s Prime Minister Manuel Valls is currently in Canada for meetings with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. CETA is the object of protests in both Canada and the EU. It was also the object of a legal procedure in Germany.  The logic of the agreement must be understood. It constitutes the first step towards the integration of  NAFTA and the EU. This integration would create an North Atlantic political entity broadly coinciding with NATO.
  • The Promise Of Canada’s Nanotechnology Industry

    2016/01/03 The term ‘nanotechnology’ entered into the public vernacular completely suddenly around the turn of the century, right around the same time that, at the same time as announcing the US National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) in 2001, President Bill Clinton declared that it would one day build materials stronger than steel, detect cancer at its inception, and store the vast records of the Library of Congress in a device the size of a sugar cube. The world of science fiction took matters even further.