Times Colonist

Ontario’s first cap-and-trade auction a sellout

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO — Ontario’s first capand-trade auction sold out all current allowances, giving the new market a strong start, but the province’s environmen­t minister warned the real test of the system will be in the emission reductions it brings about.

The March 22 auction brought in $472 million, the government said Monday.

But over the next 15 auctions, to the end of the compliance period in 2020, the market can probably expect “a reasonable amount of volatility and unpredicta­bility,” said Environmen­t Minister Glen Murray.

“The participat­ion rate, whether it’s 100 per cent or 20 per cent or 50 per cent or 60 per cent or 13 per cent, is not the success of the market,” he said. “The success of the market is really based on our ability to reduce [greenhouse gases]. We will not expect to get 100 per cent all the time.”

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

Most large emitters in Ontario are receiving allowances for free until 2020, which the government said is meant to prevent them from moving to jurisdicti­ons without carbon pricing. But for now certain electricit­y importers, natural gas distributo­rs and fuel suppliers are among those required to participat­e.

Bidders in the first auction included Union Gas, Enbridge Gas, Imperial Oil, the Greater Toronto Airports Authority, the City of Kingston, Ont., the University of Guelph, Ontario Power Generation, Apotex, Labatt, BP Canada Energy Group, Shell Energy North America and Suncor Energy Products Partnershi­p.

The provincial Liberal government hopes the quarterly auctions will bring in $1.9 billion a year, to be invested in programs that reduce emissions and help businesses and consumers adapt to a low-carbon economy.

The auction floor price was $18.07 and the actual settlement price was $18.08. Murray said he was pleased about that because he wanted the actual price to be as low as possible.

“One of the objectives of cap and trade is to manage the transition to a low carbon economy at the lowest-possible prices to Ontarians and Ontario businesses,” he said. “So we didn’t want to see early upward movement on that.”

The successful first auction is a great start for the new market, but it’s good to avoid reading too much into it, said Erica Morehouse, senior attorney with the Environmen­tal Defense Fund. “It is just one auction and I think the overall success of a program should be judged on the strength of its design and whether it’s able to work to keep carbon pollution in check,” she said.

About one quarter of the future vintages on offer were also sold and while the number may seem low, Murray said it was more than they were expecting. The result shows confidence in the longevity of the market, he said.

Ontario plans to link its capand-trade system with a joint Quebec-California market next year, and Murray said he will be in California soon for negotiatio­ns. But when linked, an estimated $466 million will leave the Ontario economy over three years, because it will be cheaper to buy allowances in those jurisdicti­ons, the auditor general has said. Both the environmen­tal commission­er and the auditor have said that means greenhouse gas emissions won’t actually be cut in Ontario.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Patrick Brown — whose party is ahead in the polls and could form government in 2018 — has said he would dismantle the cap-and-trade system in favour of a carbon tax, with the cost to consumers and business offset through other tax cuts.

Brown was undeterred by the first auction’s success. “The Wynne Liberals want us to believe they are protecting the environmen­t, but it’s a smokescree­n. Their plan sends millions of dollars to one of the richest jurisdicti­ons on earth for emission reductions there.”

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