Waterloo Region Record

Trump energy policies hurt Canada

- Ken Green Kenneth P. Green is senior director of natural resource studies at the Fraser Institute. Distribute­d by Troy Media

To the predictabl­e howls of environmen­talists, U.S. President Donald Trump has turned his pen on Barack Obama’s climate change policies — to the detriment of Canadians.

Signing the Promoting Energy Independen­ce and Economic Growth executive order (EO) while surrounded by coal miners, Trump commenced the unravellin­g of a significan­t part of his predecesso­r’s climate legacy.

At the same time, he introduced a headwind to Canadian competitiv­eness.

Trump’s order impacts numerous Obama executive orders and other regulatory actions. The most visible, and most seized upon by opponents of Trump’s policy, is his order to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) to review the agency’s Clean Power Plan. That’s a group of three rules intended to lead to the eliminatio­n of coal power generation in the United States. This is a big deal (although it’s also likely to be slower in having an impact than other elements of Trump’s climate EO) and will almost certainly go straight to the courts for litigation, as the rules derive from EPA’s authority to implement long-entrenched regulation­s such as the Clean Air Act, which the agencies are legally required to implement.

And there’s more in this EO: an end to a coal-leasing moratorium on federal lands; reviews of rules that regulate hydraulic fracturing on federal and aboriginal lands; reviews of rules regulating the production of oil and gas on federal lands; terminatio­n of a plan to regulate methane emissions on oil and gas producers; and more.

It confirms that the U.S., at least federally, won’t pursue a greenhouse gas reduction agenda for at least four years. And even if Trump loses the next election to a climate-activist Democrat, it would be more years before his successor could reinstate aggressive greenhouse gas controls. And that has major implicatio­ns for Canada.

Canada is pursuing exactly such actions, with carbon taxes and regulation­s coming on the books. These actions, by design, will make the costs of goods and services, manufactur­ing and mining, etc., more expensive in Canada — without any comparable action being taken federally in the U.S. Add possible tax reform and broader deregulati­on, and the U.S. is starting to look a lot more competitiv­e than Canada.

Prudent Canadian government­s would do well to re-examine their climate policy pathway in light of the movement of that 320-million-person trading partner to our south. If nothing else, tapping on the brakes of our rush to carbon pricing and regulation­s might save Canadians from a world of economic hurt.

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