Canadian Biomass - Fall 2024

Canada sleeping on $4-tillion bioeconomy

Sarah Sobanski 2024-10-18 06:16:33

Canada lags its G7 partners, competitors in establishing a clear path for bioeconomic growth

Jeff Passmore, founder and chair of Scaling Up, is still waiting for Canada to develop an actionable national bioeconomy strategy after more than three decades in the renewable energy sector.

“It’s counterintuitive that Canada would not have a bioeconomy strategy,” said Passmore, noting the country’s massive forests, which need to be better managed to mitigate wildfire risk, its expansive agriculture lands, which produce crop residues, and municipalities, which are landfilling waste when that organic material could also be used as a feedstock.

Passmore, also CEO for Passmore Group, a consultancy focused on helping clients rapidly develop projects in the bioeconomy and cleantech space, is preparing to host the ninth edition of his influential conference this November.

It brings together leaders from across the country and bioeconomy to discuss how to propel the sector forward.

“Canada has this huge blind spot where the bioeconomy is concerned,” he said.

To be fair, Passmore clarified the federal government does have a Forest Bioeconomy Framework, but it doesn’t mention bioenergy outside of the forest sector and leaves something to be desired when it comes to concrete action.

The same can be said for Canada’s Bioeconomy Strategy, which the federal government spent $200,000 to help Bioindustrial Innovation Canada develop in consultation with more than 400 industry representatives in 2019.

The report recommends creating new regulation and policy, including developing a national strategy to fully advance Canada’s bioeconomy.

“Certainty is the mother of investment,” said Passmore. He said companies are advancing Canadian bio-projects, but the sector won’t attract foreign investment without the country sending a “clear signal” to market it’s “serious” about the bioeconomy.

Concrete action and clear signals look like actioning programs similar to the United States’s BioPreferred Program. Created in 2002, the BioPreferred Program mandates federal departments to buy biobased products, and includes a voluntary certification program for businesses to label their biobased products so consumers can make informed purchases.

Passmore said most of Canada’s G7 partners and competitors have national bioeconomy strategies. He said it’s sleeping on the opportunity the market presents.

A 2020 report by multi-national consultancy, McKinsey and Company, suggests the “bio-revolution,” including innovation in health, food, consumer products, materials, chemicals and energy, could have a direct economic impact of US$2- to $4 trillion globally per year by mid-century.

Bio-materials, -chemicals and -energy, could have a global impact between US$200- to $300-billion annually in the next two decades.

“Four-trillion-dollars a year — that’s twice the size of Canada’s GDP. Canada’s GDP was (around) US$2 trillion a year,” said Passmore. He said there’s no reason Canada couldn’t secure a sizable slice of the bioeconomy with its resources. He added sources today estimate the potential of the bioeconomy at closer to US$30 trillion a year.

“I think we are spoiled by the vast natural resources we have,” said Passmore. “We are so blessed… we’ve been able to rest on our laurels and the Canadian economy has been driven in large part by oil and gas revenues.”

Passmore said the bioeconomy touches on so many departments, from forestry to agriculture to health and more. Government needs to get behind a strategy that brings together all its departments.

“We have to get out of those silos,” he said.

Scaling Up Bio 2024 kicks off in Ottawa, Ont. from Nov. 25 to 27.

“One of the reasons for the conference is we are trying to help solve this problem… move the bioeconomy in Canada forward further and faster,” said Passmore. “And if we don’t go faster and further we will certainly not meet our net-zero targets.”

©Annex Biomass_CFI_OF. View All Articles.

Canada sleeping on $4-tillion bioeconomy
https://magazine.canadianbiomassmagazine.ca/article/Canada+sleeping+on+%244-tillion+bioeconomy/4874431/833958/article.html

Menu
  • Page View
  • Contents View
  • Advertisers

Issue List

Summer 2025

Spring 2025

Winter 2025

Fall 2024

Summer 2024

Spring 2024

Winter 2024

Fall 2023

Summer 2023

Spring 2023

Winter 2023

Fall 2022

Summer 2022

Spring 2022

Winter 2022

Fall 2021

Summer 2021

Spring 2021

Winter 2021

Fall 2020

Summer 2020

Spring 2020

Winter 2020

Fall 2019

Summer 2019

Spring 2019

Winter 2019

September-October 2018

JulyAugust 2018

MayJune 2018

March April 2018

January-February 2018

November/December 2017

September/October 2017

July/August 2017

May-June 2017

March-April 2017

January February 2017

November December 2016

October 2016

July August 2016

June 2016

March April 2016

January February 2016

November/December 2015

September/October 2015

July August 2015

May-June 2015

March-April 2015

January-February 2015

November - December 2014

September October 2014

Intersaw Guide 2014

July August 2014

May June 2014

March/April 2014

January/February 2014

November/December 2013

September/October 2013

August/September 2013

May/June 2013

March/April 2013

January/February 2013

November/December 2012

September/October 2012

July/August 2012

May/June 2012

March/April 2012

January/February 2012

November/December 2011

September/October 2011

July/August 2011

May/June 2011

April 2011

January/February 2011

November/December 2010

September/October 2010

July/August 2010

May/June 2010

March/April 2010

January/February 2010

November/December 2009

September/October 2009

August 2009

June 2009

March 2009

December 2008

August 08


Library