National Post

Oilpatch touts technology to climate panel

Wants green investment­s from carbon tax

- By Lauren Krugel

• The oil and gas industry wants investment in emissions-busting technology to play a big role in Alberta’s climate-change strategy.

The Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers has made its submission to the five-member panel working on a broad plan to reduce the province’s greenhouse-gas emissions.

“If we want to find the balance between increasing investment and production of energy here in Alberta and more responsibl­e performanc­e on the climate side, it’ll be technology that bridges both those two imperative­s,” CAPP president Tim McMillan said in an interview.

Alberta should set a target for technology investment over the next 10 years and invest funds from its soon-to-behiked carbon levy to develop and deploy those technologi­es, the group said.

In June, the left-leaning NDP government announced the carbon price for large industrial emitters that exceed their allotment — now at $15 a tonne — would be rising to $20 a tonne next year and to $30 a tonne in 2017.

Between that change, and an increase in the corporate tax rate from 10 per cent to 12 per cent, CAPP has estimated the industry faces $800 million in higher cost over two years.

The climate change panel, headed by University of Al- berta economist Andrew Leach, is tackling the province’s wider climate strategy, focusing not just on the oil and gas sector, but on aspects like transporta­tion and power, too.

The government has said it aims to have the architectu­re of a climate plan ready in time for the UN climate talks in Paris in December.

The work of the climate panel is happening in tandem with a separate royalty review led by ATB Financial boss Dave Mowat.

CAPP has honed in on a way that the royalty system could be used to further climate goals. One of its recommenda­tions is to develop a clean infrastruc­ture royalty credit program that would encourage the adoption of green technologi­es without hurting the industry’s competitiv­eness.

McMillan said British Columbia’s Infrastruc­ture Royalty Credit Program serves as a good model.

Under that program, companies can receive up to a 50-per-cent credit for the cost of building roads or pipelines in underdevel­oped areas of the province, which can be used against royalties.

CAPP also wants more power generation to come from natural gas, a cleanerbur­ning fuel than coal, and to export it to countries like China.

“If we were to swap out a megawatt of coal electricit­y for a megawatt of natural gas electricit­y, it has very meaningful effects on carbon emissions,” said McMillan.

It would also bring in more royalties and reduce consumer costs, he added.

Earlier this week, environmen­tal group Greenpeace made its submission to the climate panel.

Its recommenda­tions

in- clude “adopting ambitious, biding and science-based” targets; the phasing out of coal and switching all of Alberta’s electricit­y to renewable sources by 2050, an economy-wide carbon price of $50 a tonne that rises to $150 a tonne by 2026 and capping oilsands expansion.

“The prescripti­on for the problem is clear — the only question is whether there’s the political will to do it,” said campaigner Mike Hudema.

 ?? Ryan Jackson / Edmonton Journal ?? Energy companies propose a credit on royalty payments if green investment­s are made.
Ryan Jackson / Edmonton Journal Energy companies propose a credit on royalty payments if green investment­s are made.

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