Edmonton Journal

Big Oil gets pragmatic on carbon tax

Savvy companies want influence over pricing policies, experts say

- Lauren Krugel

CALGARY —It may see modd to hear Big Oil tout a policy that would make it costlier to do business.

But experts say recent calls for a carbon tax have pragmatic — not just public relations — motivation­s.

Michal Moore, an energy economist at the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy, said savvy companies see a higher price of carbon as “inevitable” and want to influence how those policies take shape.

That’s why the likes of Suncor Energy boss Steve Williams have been publicly advocating tougher carbon pricing, Moore said.

When it comes to the impacts of climate change, there’s no “plausible denial anymore,” he said. Take, for instance, the drought ravaging California.

“I can’t read Steve’s mind of course, but I can certainly create good reasons why it makes sense to get out ahead of this and to send a signal to your investors: ‘Look, we’re not going to be blindsided by whatever comes down the road,” Moore said.

Williams, whose company is Canada’s dominant oilsands producer, made his carbon price pitch at a speech in Calgary last month, the sentiments of which were echoed by an executive with Cenovus Energy, another major oilsands player.

But the push came with a caveat: that any carbon tax be “broad-based” — applied to consumers and industry alike.

Alberta’s current carbon pricing regime expires at the end of this month, and it’s not clear yet how exactly it will change under the province’s newly elected NDP government.

The Specified Gas Emitters Regulation, the first scheme of its kind in North America, currently charges $15 a tonne for large industrial emitters that exceed a certain threshold. There have been calls to replace it with something more stringent and far-reaching.

“If you’re a policy taker, sometimes you don’t like the policy that you get,” said Ed Whittingha­m, executive director at the Pembina Institute, an environmen­tal think-tank.

Suncor has not only come out in favour of stronger carbon pricing, but has stated how it wants it to take shape, he said.

“I’m sure that was heard up in Edmonton.”

 ?? Jason Franson/THE CANAD IAN PRESS ?? Steve Williams, CEO of major oilsands producer Suncor Energy, has come out in support of tougher carbon pricing.
Jason Franson/THE CANAD IAN PRESS Steve Williams, CEO of major oilsands producer Suncor Energy, has come out in support of tougher carbon pricing.

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