Times Colonist

Oil industry refined climate plan for B.C.: Documents

- LAURA KANE

VANCOUVER — British Columbia’s former Liberal government asked oil and gas corporatio­ns to “refine” the language of recommenda­tions made by an advisory panel before it finalized its Climate Leadership Plan, documents show.

Meeting agendas and presentati­ons obtained under freedomof-informatio­n legislatio­n by the left-leaning Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es provide insight into the extent of industry consultati­on on the plan.

The government-appointed Climate Leadership Team released recommenda­tions in the fall of 2015 that included increasing the carbon tax rate and moving up the timeline to reduce emissions.

None of the recommenda­tions were fully adopted by the government when it released the plan in August 2016.

The documents show that after the climate team released its proposals, the Ministry of Natural Gas arranged meetings with companies and industry groups at the Calgary office of the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers in January and February 2016.

Three working groups made up of industry members and government officials were created to tackle three distinct issues: the carbon tax; methane and fugitive emissions; and electrific­ation.

The documents say the methane and electrific­ation working groups were instructed to “refine the language” of the related Climate Leadership Team recommenda­tions, while the carbon tax working group was tasked with determinin­g “the art of the possible [how much and how fast].”

While the government said at the time it would consult with industry, these meetings have only now been made public, and only after many freedom-ofinformat­ion requests, said Shannon Daub, associate director of the CCPA’s office in B.C.

“They should have been far more transparen­t about what they were doing,” she said.

The government’s Climate Leadership Team was appointed in spring 2015 and included First Nations, environmen­tal groups, climate scientists and industry representa­tives. It spent months working before releasing 32 recommenda­tions in November 2015.

Clean Energy Canada executive director Merran Smith, who sat on the team, said she was surprised and disappoint­ed to see how government consulted with the oil and gas industry.

“It’s the government’s responsibi­lity to design good climate policy, good energy policy that has the best interests of British Columbians in mind,” she said.

“They abdicated that responsibi­lity by basically asking one sector, the oil and gas sector, to rewrite the recommenda­tions that were given to them by their own team of experts.”

Brad Herald, vice-president of Western Canada operations at the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, said the industry had no final say over the substance or language of the climate plan. “They were seeking input from us. We offered that input, the same as we do in many other forums as the regulated community. Ultimately, they were the decision-makers in the space as they were with the Climate Leadership Team.”

Former natural gas minister Rich Coleman said the consultati­ons ensured the plan would meet B.C.’s greenhouse-gas reduction targets while maintainin­g strong economic growth. The meetings were not intended to be secretive, he added. “Our folks who were responsibl­e for climate action were sent out to consult with everybody, including the petroleum industry, plus forestry and all the rest,” he said.

Environmen­t Minister George Heyman said his government will announce in the next five to six weeks a new team of stakeholde­rs to review the recommenda­tions of the Climate Leadership Team and how to bring them forward. The new NDP government intends to set emissions targets for 2030 and benchmarks for the transporta­tion and building industries, he said.

The documents list more than two dozen representa­tives from at least 16 corporatio­ns and industry groups who attended the Calgary meetings, including Shell, Suncor and Chevron. Shell referred questions to CAPP while Suncor did not respond to requests for comment.

Chevron said it participat­ed in a January 2016 session to gather feedback on “draft recommenda­tions” of the Climate Leadership Team.

 ??  ?? Environmen­t and Climate Change Strategy Minister George Heyman will announce a new team to review climatecha­nge recommenda­tions.
Environmen­t and Climate Change Strategy Minister George Heyman will announce a new team to review climatecha­nge recommenda­tions.

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