The Prince George Citizen

Ontario, Quebec, California sign cap-and-trade deal

- Allison JONES

The premiers of Ontario and Quebec and the governor of California signed an agreement Friday to create the world’s secondlarg­est carbon market, dismissing naysayers and predicting that more provinces and states would soon join.

Quebec and California have been jointly holding cap-and-trade auctions since 2014, and as of Jan. 1, 2018, those will now include Ontario, which has been running its own cap-and-trade system since Jan. 1 of this year, with three sell-out auctions in a row.

The system aimed at lowering greenhouse gas emissions puts caps on the amount of pollution companies in certain industries can emit, and if they exceed those limits they must buy allowances at auction or from other companies that come in under their limits.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne said creating the world’s largest carbon market outside the E.U. is an important step.

“I think we cannot really overstate how important it is that we as these large jurisdicti­ons... play a leadership role and that as we move forward we work to bring other jurisdicti­ons with us,” she said after the three leaders signed the agreement in Quebec City.

Nova Scotia plans to introduce legislatio­n for a cap-and-trade system this fall, and other provinces are weighing their options as the federal government has said they must set up a cap-and-trade system or impose a price on carbon.

Critics in Ontario have slammed both the cost to consumers – an extra 4.3 cents per litre to the price of gasoline and about $80 a year to natural gas home heating costs, as well as indirect costs – and the potential cost to the economy.

The auditor general has said that when Ontario links its market with Quebec and California, an estimated $466 million will leave the Ontario economy over three years, because it will be cheaper to buy allowances from those jurisdicti­ons. Both the environmen­tal commission­er and the auditor have said that means greenhouse gas emissions won’t actually be cut in Ontario.

But Wynne has staunchly defended the plan, saying it is far more cost effective and effective at reducing emissions than a carbon tax, which the Opposition Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader has touted.

“We have joined this carbon market because we believe that this is the best plan, that it is the cheapest way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and that it is the best way to do that,” she said.

“In fact, doing it this way, joining this market, cap and trade, allows us to grow our industry, to support industry, to reinvest in the further reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and improve technology and by doing that we actually see economic growth.”

Ontario’s proceeds from capand-trade auctions – about $1.5 billion this year, with one more auction to go – are going to green programs, such as energy efficient retrofits for home and business, and providing smart thermostat­s to homeowners free of charge. Wynne’s two colleagues were more blunt in addressing critics of cap and trade, and climate change deniers.

“I think we are close to the tipping point, with 60 per cent of the world GDP soon covered by a carbon market,” said Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard. “Who would have said that only five years ago? Of course, we always face resistance, by ignorance sometimes or lack of knowledge.”

California Gov. Jerry Brown noted that the administra­tion of U.S. President Donald Trump may not have an agenda of fighting climate change, but that is why it is important for subnationa­l government­s to move forward.

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