Ottawa Citizen

Federal clean fuel standard could boost jobs, think-tank says

- MAURA FORREST National Post mforrest@postmedia.com Twitter.com/MauraForre­st

A new report has found the federal government’s proposed clean fuel standard will likely create jobs and drive economic growth, though it will come at a cost to households.

In a report Wednesday, Clean Energy Canada, a Vancouverb­ased environmen­tal think-tank, estimates the fuel standard could create up to 31,000 new jobs by 2030, mostly in the constructi­on and operation of clean fuel facilities.

The report also finds that the average household will spend $5 more per month with a clean fuel standard in place by 2030. An energy-conscious household — for instance, a family living in an energy-efficient home with an electric car — only stands to pay an extra $2 per month, according to the report.

Jeremy Moorhouse, a senior analyst at Clean Energy Canada, said the price of gas at the pump will likely be 1.5 cents per litre higher in 2025 and five cents per litre higher in 2030 than it would be without the clean fuel standard.

But overall, he added, Canadians will likely be paying 13 per cent less on driving in 2030 than they do today, thanks to energy efficiency regulation­s.

The average household is also expected to pay $17 per month less in 2030 than in 2015 due to efficiency measures, even with the new standard in place, the report finds.

The clean fuel standard was announced as part of the federal government’s pan-Canadian climate change framework last year. The measure is supposed to cut carbon emissions by 30 million tonnes annually as of 2030, by requiring a reduction in the carbon intensity of fuel in transporta­tion, homes and industry.

The federal government has yet to release a framework for the new standard.

“It’s a big policy from a greenhouse-gas perspectiv­e,” said Moorhouse, calling it “the single largest policy in the pan-Canadian framework.”

The report finds that a clean fuel standard could create $5.6 billion in economic activity in clean fuels, and could double the number of biofuel plants across the country. It also estimates there would be 1.2 million electric vehicles on the road by 2030 with the measure in place.

Not every sector of the economy stands to gain from the new standard. Jobs will likely be lost in refining, mechanics and new vehicle manufactur­ing, Moorhouse said. On balance, the report finds the clean fuel standard will likely increase net employment by 11,000 to 17,000 jobs by 2030.

The federal government has suggested the clean fuel standard might require a 10- to 15-per-cent reduction in the carbon intensity of fuels used in vehicles, homes and industry.

Others have voiced concern that the standard will drive up fuel costs dramatical­ly, and have suggested the measure is “yet another carbon tax.”

 ?? HANDOUT/ NEXEN INC. ?? Clean Energy Canada, a Vancouver think-tank, reports that a federal fuel standard could create up to 31,000 new jobs by 2030, mostly in the constructi­on and operation of clean fuel facilities.
HANDOUT/ NEXEN INC. Clean Energy Canada, a Vancouver think-tank, reports that a federal fuel standard could create up to 31,000 new jobs by 2030, mostly in the constructi­on and operation of clean fuel facilities.

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