Edmonton Journal

CN Resources touts methane reductions, says target is in the offing

- GEOFFREY MORGAN Financial Post gmorgan@nationalpo­st.com

CALGARY As energy lobby groups spar with government­s over methane emissions, Canada’s largest oil and gas producer is touting its own methane reductions.

“Since 2014, we have reduced our methane emissions in our convention­al and thermal operations by 37 per cent, well on our way to achieving the upcoming 45 per cent methane emissions reduction target proposed in upcoming methane regulation­s,” Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. president Steve Laut said on an earnings call Thursday.

Energy companies’ methane emissions have become a focal point in discussion­s with provincial and federal government­s on climate regulation­s. Alberta’s NDP government is set to release a draft of its methane rules any day and the federal Liberals are in a consulting period over targets released in May.

The Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, the country’s largest energy industry associatio­n, repeated its call this week for government­s to loosen rules on methane reductions. CAPP is asking government­s to adopt a “fleet average” approach, allowing companies to reduce emissions across its fleet by 45 per cent rather than at each specific site.

“The CAPP approach is very common sense and it actually gets methane emissions down more effectivel­y and faster,” Laut said, adding the fleet average approach would prevent job losses across the energy industry.

“I don’t think Alberta can afford to lose 4,000 jobs at this point in time,” he said.

In a release earlier this week, CAPP put the number of jobs at risk from a site-specific methane reduction strategy at 7,000.

Laut said he was confident the provincial government would see the merits of CAPP’s approach and that energy companies and environmen­tal organizati­ons are “aligned” and committed to methane reduction targets.

Alberta Energy Minister Marg McCuiag-Boyd said in a statement that more details and “next steps” in the government’s methane reduction plan would be unveiled soon but did not provide a date. She did indicate energy companies’ efforts to reduce emissions had been taken into account.

“Their early action and commitment to working with us to get this right means we are well on our way to an Alberta-made plan that puts the jobs of hardworkin­g Albertans and a strong economy front and centre,” McCuaig-Boyd said of oil producers.

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