Montreal Gazette

Reducing emissions to cost oilpatch $25B over 10 years: report

- GEOFFREY MORGAN Financial Post gmorgan@nationalpo­st.com Twitter: geoffreymo­rgan

CALGARY The Canadian oil-andgas industry estimates it will pay $25 billion over the next 10 years to comply with federal and provincial climate-change policies and is pushing federal and provincial government­s for a series of breaks on regulation­s.

In a report released Tuesday, the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) said the country’s new emissions regulation­s are driving up costs for domestic oil and gas producers, which is causing investment to leave the country while doing little to reduce emissions.

CAPP’s report said the regulation­s are having “serious unintended consequenc­es” for the industry and jobs.

A debate about the Canadian energy industry’s competitiv­eness in the face of increasing­ly stringent environmen­tal regulation­s has intensifie­d in recent months, especially as government­s move forward with placing limits on methane emissions, and as the price of carbon emissions is projected to rise.

As a result, CAPP’s report — the third in a series of seven — contains a series of requests for government­s, ranging from big asks, like the immediate deductibil­ity of expenses, to more specific requests about targeted regulation­s, including that only new naturalgas facilities should be subject to methane-reduction targets.

“Investment in Canada’s energy industry — and jobs for Canadians — will continue to leave for other jurisdicti­ons unless there are changes to regulatory policies that enable growth,” CAPP president and CEO Tim McMillan said in a release.

He said domestic oil and gas companies support meeting environmen­tal goals, but government­s need to take into account the extra burden of added costs or activity will just move to places with lower standards, in a phenomenon CAPP called “carbon leakage.”

On methane emissions, the country’s largest oil-and-gas industry group says reducing methane is “a critical step for meaningful action on climate change” but local oil and gas players are subjected to tighter regulation­s than direct competitor­s in the U.S.

In Canada, new methane regulation­s will target both new and existing natural-gas facilities. In the U.S., only new facilities will be subjected to methane-reduction targets, and old facilities will be grandfathe­red.

Methane is a more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, but is also less abundant in the atmosphere, according to NASA.

“Canada is being a leader and is the first jurisdicti­on to implement methane regulation­s for both new and existing facilities, and this should be applauded,” Pembina Institute interim federal policy director Isabelle Turcotte said.

She said that methane regulation­s are still being developed in Alberta, and so it’s too early to tell how stringent these new regulation­s will be for the oil-and-gas industry.

She also said that methane can be a valuable commodity, and so there could be an economic benefit for capturing and using it.

“Reducing methane emissions makes good sense because it’s a wasted resource. The leaks and the vented methane is a cost because, ultimately, it’s a product, and there are very cost-effective ways of catching those emissions,” she said.

Turcotte added that Canada cannot meet its obligation­s under the Paris agreement on climate change by granting large exemptions on methane-reduction limits, and that Canada will be challenged to meet those commitment­s given current regulation­s.

CAPP, for its part, praised regulation­s in Alberta and B.C. that have targeted flaring and venting from natural-gas facilities and have resulted in emissions reductions.

Specific oil and gas producers in Calgary, including CAPP members Encana Corp. and Cenovus Energy Inc., have released details of their own initiative­s to reduce methane emissions.

Cenovus has said it uses compressed air rather than natural gas in pneumatic pumps to reduce methane emissions, among other initiative­s.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? The oil-and-gas industry claims new rules aimed at reducing air pollution will put Canadian industry at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge. Producers are asking the federal and provincial government­s for a break.
BLOOMBERG The oil-and-gas industry claims new rules aimed at reducing air pollution will put Canadian industry at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge. Producers are asking the federal and provincial government­s for a break.
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