Oil lobby wants Ottawa to put a halt on carbon tax and new climate regulations amid coronavirus crisis
Producers ask for freeze on carbon tax plus delay on new climate regulations
OTTAWA—Canada’s oil and gas producers have asked the federal government to freeze the carbon tax and delay new climate change regulations while the industry weathers the storm of COVID-19.
In a letter to Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’Regan sent March 27, Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) CEO Tim McMillan said Canada’s energy sector is facing an unprecedented fiscal assault from a global collapse in oil prices.
The combination of plummeting demand and a production war between Saudi Arabia and Russia pushed prices down all over the world. In Western Canada, heavy crude prices fell below $5 a barrel again this week, less than a tenth of what it traded for a year ago.
The crisis has led to an allhands-on-deck lobbying effort, with CAPP recording at least 29 meetings with federal officials and cabinet ministers between March 12 and March 29.
Moira Kelly, a spokesperson for Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson, replied to questions about the requests with a list of all the measures the federal government has taken to help businesses and Canadians in general, from a massive wage-subsidy program for employers whose revenues have plunged to a benefit program for unemployed workers.
“By providing immediate help to businesses, and to Canadians in need, we have put in place one of the most generous response plans in the world,” she said by email. Environment critics see the list of demands as the industry’s attempt to use the COVID-19 crisis as a cover to curb health and safety policies and put off regulations that will help the environment.
“It’s a crass attempt to take advantage of a global health crisis,” said Dale Marshall, national climate program manager with Environmental Defence.
He said many of the requests are about things CAPP has repeatedly lobbied against without success up to now, including the carbon price, clean-fuel standards and restrictions on methane emissions from oil production. In an interview with The Canadian Press, McMillan said the root of the requests come from the industry’s need to maintain safe and essential operations as it follows health guidelines.
The industry also wants to ensure no new laws or regulations are implemented until proper consultations can be completed, and that the industry is given time to recover from this price shock. McMillan told O’Regan the fossil fuel sector wants to both survive the crisis and be part of Canada’s economic recovery when it has been resolved.
Among CAPP’s requests are delays to reporting requirements for greenhouse gas emissions, deferring the 2020 requirements for a number of reports on compliance with environmental and safety recommendations and extending deadlines for on things like air and water pollution. The industry also wants promised changes to the Canadian Environmental Protection Act to be put off because the needed consultations can’t happen while public gatherings and travel are not allowed. The law, which governs toxic substances, has been under review since 2016 and the House of Commons environment committee recommended more than 80 changes to it in 2017. The Liberal government held off on implementing any of them until after the 2019 election.