Ontario Chemical and Biochemical Industry

Home to manufacturing operations for 9 of the 15 largest chemical manufacturing companies in the world

You’re in good company

Ontario boasts Canada’s largest chemical manufacturing sector – one that is evolving into a global leader in biohybrid chemicals. We’re home to:

nine of the top 15 global chemical firms (by sales) have manufacturing operations in the province

over $16 billion in shipments with nearly three-quarters exported to global markets nearly 700 chemical manufacturing establishments

North America’s fifth largest sector by employment and ninth largest by shipments

the world’s largest bio-succinic acid production plant

the first company in the world to source Marcellus Basin natural gas liquids as ethane cracker feedstock approximately 60% of Canada’s grain corn and soybean supply – key feedstock for biochemical production, and

world-renowned industrial biotechnology research and commercialization institutes.

Chemical sector insights

With 40% of the country’s total production, Ontario is at the centre of Canada’s chemical manufacturing industry. Most of the activity takes place in three key regions: Sarnia-Lambton, Greater Toronto Area (GT A)/Niagara and Eastern Ontario.

Extensive infrastructure and supply chain

Ontario: an evolving bio-hybrid chemicals cluster

Ontario’s chemical sector encompasses the entire value chain – from industrial chemicals to synthetic resins, and from fertilizers and formulated products to petroleum refining. Our industrial biotechnology value chain comprises agricultural and forestry biomass supply , grain corn and soybean mills, midstream biorefineries and biofuel processors as well as downstream biomaterials manufacturers.

On the petrochemical front, Ontario offers direct access to heavy and light crudes, natural gas and natural gas liquids (including ethane) all from North American regions as well as from new, unconventional shale gas sources, such as the Marcellus and Utica basins. NOVA Chemicals, the first company in the world to access Marcellus basin shale gas liquids as feedstock, has converted its Ontario ethylene cracker to handle up to 100% natural gas liquids.

Ontario is also home to the Union Gas Dawn Facility , the third-largest natural gas trading hub in North America and the largest underground natural gas storage facility in Canada. The Dawn Hub has:

daily trading activity in excess of 9 PJs (8 Bcf )

100+ companies trading, including six of North America’s top 10 natural gas marketers, and

over 166 PJs (156 Bcf ) of high-deliverability underground storage to meet customer needs.

Diverse biomass supply

The Dawn Hub is the 3rd largest natural gas trading hub in North America, located right in Ontario.

Feedstocks are renewable, biological materials that can be used directly as fuel, or converted to another form of fuel or energy product. Biomass feedstocks are plant, wood and algal materials used to create biomaterials as well as fuels such as ethanol, butanol, biodiesel and other green hydrocarbon fuels.

Ontario’s large agricultural and forestry sector provides an abundant and diverse supply of biomass feedstock supply for use in biobased chemicals, fuels and materials production. Our agricultural zones offer large volumes of soybeans, grain corn, winter wheat and wood supply .

The province supplies over 14 million cubic metres of harvested wood. And, Southern Ontario produces approximately 60% of Canada’s corn and soybean supply:

Ontario’s chemical subsectors

Ontario’s chemical industry manufactures products covering the entire value-chain – from polymers to alternative fuels, fertilizers to gases and adhesives, and even the components for high-tech fabrics and other goods.

Ontario’s chemical industry manufactures products

Ontario’s Chemical Subsectors (not

exhaustive)

Basic chemicals

(ethylene, aromatics, styrene)

Polymers, Resins, Additives

Fertilizer

Industrial gases

Specialty chemicals

(coatings, adhesives, paper chemicals,

water)

Biobased chemicals and materials

Petroleum refiners

(diesel; gasoline; jet fuel, e.g. , solvents)*

Companies

NOVA Chemicals, Imperial Oil, Styrolution, Birla (Columbian

Chemical), Cabot Canada

ARLANXEO, Invista, Chemtura, Mancuso

CF Industries

Linde, Air Liquide, Air Products, Praxair , Plains Midstream Canada**

Cytec, DuPont, BASF , H.C. Stark, T oda Kogyo Corp, Evonik, ERCO

Ingredion, Jungbunzlauer , EcoSynthetix

Imperial Oil, Suncor , Shell Canada

Sarnia-Lambton – Ontario’s chemical home base

The Sarnia-Lambton region has the nation’s most concentrated and integrated chemicals cluster comprised of chemical and biochemical production plants as well as petroleum refiners. The region’s strengths include:

close partnerships between industry and provincial academia such as Western University and Lambton College

concentration of skilled trades serving the chemical sector and an industrial supply chain comprised of specialized engineering, machining, environmental services, custom metal fabricating, industrial pipefitting and boiler making firms

multiple pipelines transporting key petrochemical feedstock products, including crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids from all major North American supply basins into Ontario, including the nearby Marcellus and Utica Shale Basins

brownfield lands with amenities including steam, wastewater treatment and “behind-the-fence” electricity , as well as serviced industrial greenfield lands, and

being situated within the province’s key crop growing areas for grain corn and soybean.

An innovative R&D hub. Generous incentives. Overall savings.

World-class R&D and significant financial support

Ontario is recognized globally for outstanding research and academic institutes in the field of industrial biotechnology . We have specialized centres that offer resources such as commercialization, advisory support and R&D matchmaking. A number of commercialization accelerators are available for biochemical innovations. These include Bioindustrial Innovation Canada in Sarnia, the Bioproducts Discovery and Development Centre (BDDC) in Guelph, the Centre for Research and Innovation in the Bio-Economy (CRIBE) in Thunder Bay , GreenCentre Canada in Kingston and MaRS Discovery District in Toronto.

Academic brilliance

World-renowned Ontario universities are supporting industrial biotechnology research.

Skilled workers. Competitive labour costs. World-class education.

Best-in-class education solidifies the future

Throughout the province, 27 universities and colleges award degrees and diplomas in Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry and Chemical Process and Production to train the next generation of industry leaders.

Ontario has talent!

Over 35% of Canada’s skilled trade workers reside in Ontario, with the chemical sector employing more than 26,000. In the Sarnia-Lambton region alone, more than 5,000 skilled trades specialize in the construction and servicing of refineries and chemical plants.

A cross-section of Ontario’s skilled trades:

boilermaker welders, boilermakers

bricklayers, carpenters, cement masons

electricians, insulators, ironworkers

labourers, millwrights, operator engineers

painters, pipefitters, pipewelders

rodmen, sheet-metal workers

Global investors choose Ontario

The numbers tell the story: $16.2 billion in total shipments in 2015

, , ,