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Alberta's emissions down slightly but still make up lion's share of Canada's greenhouse gas

- Robson Fletcher

The oil and gas sector re‐ mains by far the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in Alberta, which remains by far the largest emitter of all the provinces, but its share of Canada's total emissions has declined - slightly.

Alberta's emissions to‐ talled 270 megatonnes of carbon-dioxide equivalent in 2022, according to the latest National Inventory Report, which was released Thurs‐ day.

That's down ever so slightly from the province's 271 megatonnes in 2021.

Alberta accounted for 38 per cent of the country's total emissions in 2022, down from 39 per cent the year be‐ fore.

The declines are due largely to plummeting emis‐ sions from Alberta's electric‐ ity generation as the province continues to phase out its coal-fired power plants.

Alberta produced 19 megatonnes of emissions from its electricit­y sector in 2022, which is less than half of what the sector was emit‐ ting five years earlier.

"It's significan­t … especial‐

considerin­g that our ly province is growing and elec‐ tricity demand is growing," said Marie Christine Bouchard with the Pembina Institute, a clean-energy think tank.

"You're still seeing that substantia­l reduction associ‐ ated with not producing elec‐ tricity with coal."

Emissions from the oil and gas sector totalled just over 158 megatonnes in 2022.

That's down by half a megatonne compared to a year earlier, even while oil production in the province in‐ creased.

Federal Environmen­t Min‐ ister Steven Guilbeault high‐ lighted that as some "good news" in latest inventory re‐ port, which Canada is re‐ quired to submit to the United Nations under the ter‐ ms of the Paris Agreement.

"Methane emissions are going down in the oil and gas sector," Guilbeault told re‐ porters in Ottawa on Thurs‐ day.

"They will need to come down substantia­lly more," he added.

Guilbeault said the coun‐ try remains on track to meet its 2030 emissions-reduction goals, even though total emissions grew to 708 mega‐ tonnes in 2022, compared with 698 megatonnes in 2021.

A big part of that growth, he noted, was due to revi‐ sions in the way methane emissions are measured and included in the national in‐ ventory.

"We've known for many years that methane was being under-reported … and we're deploying a lot of effort to ensure we're getting the most accurate measuremen‐ ts as we can," Guilbeault said.

Those efforts include aeri‐ al surveys to measure actual emissions, he said.

In the past, methane emissions were calculated based on fuel use reported by companies, but experts have noted large discrepan‐ cies between those figures and actual measuremen­ts of methane taken by aircraft above oilsands operations and other industrial facilities.

The methane revisions had an outsized - and retroactiv­e - effect on Alber‐ ta's emission totals in the Na‐ tional Inventory Report, dat‐ ing back decades.

In the latest report, the re‐ vised emissions from Alber‐ ta's oil and gas sector were 10 to 15 megatonnes higher for each year between 1990 and 2021, compared to the previous report.

Looking at the sector in finer detail, emissions have been generally trending up‐ ward from the oilsands while trending downward from nat‐ ural gas production and pro‐ cessing.

While Alberta remains the largest contributo­r to Canada's greenhouse gas emissions of all the provinces, it's second on a per-capita basis.

Saskatchew­an is the largest emitter by that mea‐ sure, with about 6.4 mega‐ tonnes per 100,000 people in 2022, compared to six mega‐ tonnes for Alberta.

Quebec had the lowest emissions at 0.9 megatonnes per 100,000 people.

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