Cape Breton Post

Nova Scotia could burn coal past 2040: environmen­tal group

- ANDREA GUNN

OTTAWA — A newly proposed equivalenc­y agreement between the provincial and federal government­s could see Nova Scotia continuing to burn coal past 2040.

The Halifax-based Ecology Action Centre is warning that the long-term projection­s of the proposed equivalenc­y agreement signal that Nova Scotia could still be emitting millions of tonnes of greenhouse gases from coal more than a decade past the 2030 deadline.

“It’s just fine for Nova Scotia to take a little longer to phase out coal but taking past 2030 and continuing to emit millions of tonnes of carbon from coal in the 2040 decade is just way too late,” said Stephen Thomas, the centre’s energy campaign coordinato­r.

Back in 2014 the province and the federal government signed an equivalenc­y agreement on emissions from coal-fired electricit­y generation. This was because the federal government at the time passed a regulation that would require coal plants to shut at the end of their economic life.

Nova Scotia heavily relies on coal to generate the majority of its energy — currently, about 55 per cent the province’s annual electricit­y generation comes from Nova Scotia Power-owned coal plants — while almost 30 per cent of Nova Scotia’s electricit­y is supplied by renewable energy sources.

In 2007, only nine per cent of Nova Scotia’s electricit­y was renewable, and 80 per cent of that electricit­y was created by burning coal.

“In 2014 we had already a few measures to reduce carbon emissions from the electricit­y sector including ... caps on greenhouse gas emissions, renewable energy targets, energy efficiency, and the Maritime Link investment was finalized around that time as well,” Jason Hollett, Nova Scotia Environmen­t’s executive director of climate change told SaltWire.

That initial equivalenc­y agreement between Nova Scotia and the Harper government covered the period of 2015 to 2030 and allowed for Nova Scotia to continue to use coal in its energy generation mix beyond what would have been permitted federally. Hollett said this was because the province was able to prove it could reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by an amount that is equivalent to or greater than what would be achieved under the federal government’s regulation­s.

But because the Canadian Environmen­tal Protection Act limits the applicabil­ity of equivalenc­y agreements to five-year chunks, the first part of that agreement is set to expire at the end of 2019.

FEDS COMMITTED TO CUTTING COAL

In 2016, at the same time as it announced a pan-Canadian approach to climate change, which included a nationwide carbon pricing framework, the Liberal government made a further commitment to phase out coal entirely by 2030.

As part of signing on to that plan, Nova Scotia and Ottawa came to an agreement-in-principle with the province to negotiate a renewed agreement on coal. At the end of March, the next five-year chunk of that equivalenc­y agreement was published.

While the terms and figures have been updated to reflect what’s happened over the last five years Hollett said the new agreement is mostly to ensure the existing agreement doesn’t expire at the end of December.

“It was important that the agree

ment was renewed to keep that consistent regulatory approach in place,” Hollett said.

But Thomas said that there have been no updates to Nova Scotia’s plan to phase out coal since before this equivalenc­y process was announced more than two years ago is cause for concern and shows a lack of ambition on the part of the province.

“There’s no new emission reduction from this plan,” he said.

COAL EMISSIONS TIED TO NOVA SCOTIANS’ HEALTH

In addition, final regulation­s on emissions reductions from the electricit­y sector published by the federal government in the Canadian Gazette in November showed that phasing out coal electricit­y in Nova Scotia by 2030 would avoid 89 premature deaths, 8,000 asthma episodes and 58,000 days of breathing difficulty for Nova Scotians.

Thomas said by focusing on building more renewable energy into the province’s power grid, there’s every opportunit­y for Nova Scotia to phase out coal soon after the 2030 deadline while creating jobs in the green energy sector.

“There’s no reason why Nova Scotia has to continue burning coal into the 2040 decade as this plan puts out,” he said.

But according to Hollett, phasing out coal entirely by 2030 would require building new natural gasfired plants to replace those 2,200 megawatts of generating capacity from coal. Hollett said switching to natural gas would reduce emissions in the short term but drive the province’s high energy rates even higher and would just lock Nova Scotia into another fossil fuel for the long term.

“What we’re trying to do is to use those coal plants to increase the amount of renewables that are online ... so that hopefully allows us to avoid a large investment in natural gas,” he said

Hollett said in recent years the province has built 600 megawatts of wind, has invested $1.6 billion in the Maritime Link in order to have access to a massive amount of hydroelect­ricity via Muskrat Falls after 2020, and spent tens of millions of dollars on energy efficiency — efforts that he said will continue.

“Natural gas will probably play a role in the future of electricit­y generation in the province, but we don’t want to jump wholesale from coal into natural gas because that actually crowds out the opportunit­y from some of the other cleaner sources,” Hollett said.

The proposed equivalenc­y agreement is open for feedback until May 29. Individual­s or groups can provide comment in writing to the federal government via mail or email.

 ?? CAPE BRETON POST PHOTO ?? A mountain of coal is seen at the Donkin Mine in Cape Breton in this undated file photo.
CAPE BRETON POST PHOTO A mountain of coal is seen at the Donkin Mine in Cape Breton in this undated file photo.
 ?? GOOGLE MAPS ?? A Google map showing sites in Nova Scotia that burn coal.
GOOGLE MAPS A Google map showing sites in Nova Scotia that burn coal.

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