Calgary Herald

Group suggests oilsands penalties

- IAN BICKIS

Oilsands producers could face steep fines and suspended projects if industry comes close to hitting a mandated 100-megatonne limit under recommenda­tions proposed by Alberta’s Oil Sands Advisory Group.

But the non-binding report sets out a series of options to help avoid reaching that point, including requiring the use of better technology, setting out emissions management plans and costs, and improved regulation­s.

Advisory group co-chair Dave Collyer said the increased emissions reporting and forecastin­g in the near-term will help to achieve the lower emissions- intensity goal.

“That transparen­cy and awareness, in fact, does drive behavioura­l change,” Collyer said.

The penalties for industry would only kick in when industry looks to be within a year of hitting the cap. The penalties could include forcing those with higher-than-average emissions intensity to reduce them or face fines proposed at $200 per tonne of carbon. The government could also suspend projects that haven’t started constructi­on.

Collyer said that while the plan could hit higher emitters, it’s just part of where global expectatio­ns on climate action are headed.

“People have to accept that in the world we’re likely to be in, carbon intensity matters.”

Wildrose Leader Brian Jean said in a statement that giving the government authority to suspend projects would further chill investment in the oil and gas sector and is a clear cap on economic growth.

Collyer said when the cap might be reached is much debated, but there is a general sense that the oilsands would hit the cap by about 2030, or somewhere around four million barrels a day.

The oilsands industry currently emits about 70 megatonnes of greenhouse gases, but based on exceptions to the cap, the number is closer to 60 megatonnes, Collyer said.

Those exemptions include the electricit­y portion of co-generation, as well as experiment­al and enhanced recovery operations.

Upgraders that started after 2015 will be subject to a separate 10 megatonne cap.

To better understand how the industry is performing, the advisory group recommende­d establishi­ng annual and 10-year forecasts on emissions.

It also suggested reviews on the system and how facilities might be affected as the oilsands hits 80, 90 and 95 megatonnes.

Alberta Environmen­t Minister Shannon Phillips said the measures recommende­d by the advisory group, combined with the carbon price, look to provide enough near-term incentives — and the government is not considerin­g adding more.

“There’s really a package of proposals here to improve our performanc­e,” said Phillips. “So yes, the cap is a safety net, but not necessaril­y a relevant determinat­ion because we have done our work in advance of reaching it.”

Phillips said the government will review the non-binding recommenda­tions and begin stakeholde­r consultati­ons, with an aim to have the regulation­s implemente­d by early 2018.

Terry Abel, executive vice-president at the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, said that policies that foster technologi­cal innovation sound encouragin­g and align with industry goals.

The 18-member advisory group included an industry caucus headed by Collyer that included six oilsands companies, an environmen­tal caucus led by campaigner Tzeporah Berman and a community caucus led by Melody Lepine, director of government and industry relations at the Mikisew Cree First Nation.

Berman, who was a controvers­ial appointmen­t because of her strong views against the oilsands, is leaving the advisory group along with several other members as it transition­s to a different phase.

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