National Post

Hydrogen heavy: the Conservati­ve platform on energy

- Geoffrey Morgan Financial Post gmorgan@nationalpo­st.com Twitter: geoffreymo­rgan

• Unlike past iterations of the Conservati­ve Party of Canada’s climate change plan, the version unveiled Monday has teeth.

Erin O’toole’s Conservati­ve Party unveiled its full platform at the beginning of Canada’s federal election campaign this week and it contained multiple promises on how the party would tackle climate change and protect the environmen­t.

The Conservati­ves have pledged to protect up to 25 per cent of the country’s surface area and its water by banning raw sewage dumping in waterways by municipali­ties and cruise ships. They would study a carbon border adjustment tariff to tax goods made in jurisdicti­ons without carbon taxes and by taxing “frequent flyers” and buyers of gasoline-burning luxury cars while encouragin­g more electric-car purchases.

The issues where the Conservati­ves could potentiall­y have the biggest impact on climate and the environmen­t are outlined below. Financial Post will highlight the policy points from each of the major parties that have a chance at forming government and how they would affect the energy and power industries in Canada during the election campaign.

PLASTICS AS A WEDGE ISSUE

The Conservati­ve platform specifical­ly goes after the Liberal government on the issue of plastic waste by blasting the government’s decision to label plastic as “toxic,” which had ignited a sharp disagreeme­nt between the federal government and Alberta, which has tried to encourage additional petrochemi­cal investment­s.

The Liberals had previously said that labelling products as toxic is necessary to ensure they’re managed to prevent those products being discarded into the environmen­t. The Conservati­ves say they would ban the export of plastics from Canada, unless the exporter could show the products would be recycled. They would also try to encourage more “value recovery from plastics” within Canada, including by turning plastic waste into chemicals.

A FUEL STANDARD BY A DIFFERENT NAME

The Liberal government’s Clean Fuel Standard was opposed by integrated oil companies with refining operations in Canada, which said the policy could result in refinery shutdowns in Canada.

The Conservati­ve’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard promises to “finalize and improve” the regulation­s in the Clean Fuel Standard to “reduce carbon emissions from every litre of gasoline” burned in Canada. Based on British Columbia’s existing fuel standard, the Conservati­ves aim to achieve a 20-per-cent reduction in carbon intensity for fuel, while allowing the agricultur­al and forestry sector to earn land-based credits “by improving the carbon sequestrat­ion of agricultur­al

lands and managed forests.”

MONEY FOR CARBON CAPTURE

The Conservati­ves are pledging to invest $5 billion in carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage (CCUS). The platform also promises a tax credit “to rapidly accelerate the deployment of CCUS technology in the energy sector and in important industries that have few alternativ­es to bring fossil fuels, like fertilizer and chemical production.”

The oil and gas industry has been asking for direct assistance on CCUS investment­s after receiving assurances there would be tax incentives for investing in the Co2-limiting technology.

MORE RENEWABLE NATURAL GAS

The Conservati­ve election platform mentions methane twice and both times in relation to capturing methane emissions from landfills and farms and using it as renewable natural gas. The party says it would introduce a renewable natural gas mandate requiring 15 per cent of all downstream natural gas consumptio­n to be renewable by 2030.

Like the low-carbon fuel standard, the party’s plan for a renewable natural gas mandate is based on a target already in place in British Columbia.

HEAVY ON HYDROGEN

In many cases, Canada’s various provincial electric grids are better connected with the states down south than they are with their neighbouri­ng provinces. The Conservati­ve platform promises a clean energy strategy that would boost connection­s between the provinces, increase the use of mass storage and encourage more nuclear, hydrogen and renewable power.

Hydrogen is a major talking point in the platform, garnering 17 mentions in the document, and a key part of the party’s clean energy strategy. In addition, or possibly in conjunctio­n, the Conservati­ve platform also describes a “hydrogen energy strategy that rapidly increases the use of hydrogen — especially green hydrogen — in Canada and builds our export capacity.”

 ?? ALEX KRAUS / BLOOMBERG ?? A chemical symbol on a hydrogen-powered bus at the
Wesseling green hydrogen refinery in Germany.
ALEX KRAUS / BLOOMBERG A chemical symbol on a hydrogen-powered bus at the Wesseling green hydrogen refinery in Germany.

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