Regina Leader-Post

Carbon capture report off the mark

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A recent Leader-Post article on carbon capture and storage technology (Carbon capture wrong technology, says a new report, July 7) was based on research that was off the mark.

The Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF) incorrectl­y states that SaskPower’s Boundary Dam 3 project (BD 3) was ill-conceived.

In the article, Opposition critic Cathy Sproule seizes upon this flawed research to dismiss CCS technology entirely.

We shouldn’t be surprised the GWPF holds this view. The organizati­on has been described as “the United Kingdom’s most high-profile climate change denier group.”

What is surprising is that Ms. Sproule, who purports to be an environmen­talist, is consorting with climate change skeptics to score political points. Ms. Sproule knows there are many wellrespec­ted organizati­ons that accept the science of climate change that have a more favourable view of CCS.

Indeed, both the Internatio­nal Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) have said it will be impossible to meet internatio­nal emissions reduction targets without the widespread deployment of CCS.

In fact, the same day the Leader-Post published its story, IEA chief economist Laszlo Varro said in a commentary that BD 3 and a similar project in Texas “have demonstrat­ed that there is a solution to one of the most complex energy and climate dilemmas we face: a large global coal-fired power fleet that today provides around 40 per cent of the world’s electricit­y. This fleet is the youngest it has been for decades, with more than 500 GW (gigawatts) added since 2010, mostly in emerging economies.”

Mr. Varro highlights an unavoidabl­e fact: the world depends on coal to generate electricit­y and will for the foreseeabl­e future.

Given this reality, we will need a combinatio­n of policies, including the aggressive adoption of CCS, to deal with climate change.

Saskatchew­an should be proud of what SaskPower has accomplish­ed at Boundary Dam. The power station now produces the cleanest fossil fuel electricit­y in Canada — three times cleaner than natural gas.

Researcher­s have come from around the world to learn from SaskPower. They have come to Saskatchew­an because this province is in the process of advancing an indispensa­ble technology.

It’s time all of us got behind important work that has the ability to dramatical­ly reduce emissions, not just in Saskatchew­an and Canada, but around the world. Scott Moe,

Minister of Environmen­t, Government of Saskatchew­an

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