Nauticol Energy Grande Prairie Complex is an upcoming petrochemical complex located in Alberta, Canada. The complex is expected to commence commercial operations in 2024 and is likely to have an annual petrochemical capacity of 3.4mtpa. The complex will use natural gas as its key feedstock. The plant in this complex is operated by Nauticol Energy.
Discover B2B Marketing That Performs
Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.
Details of key upcoming projects in Nauticol Energy Grande Prairie Complex
The complex is set to add capacity with upcoming plants including Nauticol Energy Grande Prairie Methanol Plant (1mtpa), and Nauticol Energy Grande Prairie Methanol Plant Expansion 1 (2.4mtpa).
The technology and operator details for upcoming plants are as follows:| Plant Name | Operator | Technology |
|---|---|---|
| Nauticol Energy Grande Prairie Methanol Plant | Nauticol Energy | Haldor Topsoe Methanol Technology |
| Nauticol Energy Grande Prairie Methanol Plant Expansion 1 | Nauticol Energy | Haldor Topsoe Methanol Technology |
Key Products Capacity – Nauticol Energy Grande Prairie Complex, 2021-2030
US Tariffs are shifting - will you react or anticipate?
Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard. Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis.
By GlobalDataThe complex is expected to produce key products such as methanol.
Methanol capacity share i.e., 100% of the total annual capacity of the complex with 3.4mtpa.
About Nauticol Energy
Nauticol Energy Ltd is a provider of intelligent engineering services aimed at supplying sustainable blue methanol to worldwide markets. Through its blue methanol facility in Alberta, the firm leverages the potential of Western Canada’s plentiful natural
Methodology
Information on the petrochemical complexes/plants is sourced from GlobalData’s oil & gas petrochemicals plants database that provides detailed information on all active and upcoming, petrochemical plants globally. Not all companies mentioned in the article may be currently existing due to their merger or acquisition or business closure.
