Moose Jaw Express.com

MLA’s Column

- Warren Michelson

SaskPower’s natural gas-fired power plant planned for the City of Moose Jaw is of vital importance to our community and I want to assure citizens that the Saskatchew­an Party Government and I are working diligently to see this project move forward.

This week I wrote to Minister McKenna, the Federal Minister of Environmen­t and Climate Change, stating our disapprova­l of changes made on June 28, 2019, to the environmen­tal status of natural gas fired power plants, and to express serious concerns about the increase to the carbon tax on large emitters.

This increase to the carbon tax for the planned power plant project in Moose Jaw represents a significan­t cost of over $2 billion in the first 15 years of operation, assuming that the tax doesn’t continue to increase beyond $50 in 2022.

This change in environmen­tal status should be reconsider­ed and repealed as our province has demonstrat­ed environmen­tal leadership through ‘Prairie Resilience’, our made-in-Saskatchew­an climate change plan.

Our Climate Change Framework is targeting a 40 per cent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions in the electricit­y sector below 2005 levels - by 2030. This commitment, which is now formally recognized in the Canada-Saskatchew­an Equivalenc­y Agreement, is at risk. Minister McKenna was well aware of SaskPower’s decision to build a combined cycle natural gas power plant in Moose Jaw through an initial environmen­tal impact assessment several years ago. This base-load power generation is planned to replace SaskPower’s coal plants and backup our province’s expanding portfolio of intermitte­nt renewables such as wind.

In order to achieve substantia­l emission reduction targets, the gas plant at Moose Jaw is required as the alternativ­es will unnecessar­ily increase rates for SaskPower customers, including the many energy-intensive and trade-exposed job creators here in Moose Jaw.

In fact, ground was broken for a 200MW wind project south of Moose Jaw this summer and we’re happy to see the economic opportunit­ies coming to this area from such a project. But this increase means delays, and more emissions may result from base-load power coming from existing coal and natural gas facilities.

It is also important to note that Minister McKenna did not consult on this carbon tax increase for natural gasfired electricit­y facilities. The regulation­s as she proposed them in October 2018 were completely different than the increase that she made in June 2019.

The transition to more sustainabl­e energy can come with economic opportunit­ies, however when the people of this province are faced with the burdens of these carbon tax increases, investment­s like the natural gas facility in Moose Jaw become uncertain. If this is the kind of uncertaint­y facing a Crown-owned utility, it is an even more adverse signal being generated to private investment.

We urge the decision makers in Ottawa to repeal this unnecessar­y increase to the carbon tax and implement regulation­s that support the Climate Change Framework and economic opportunit­ies for the Province of Saskatchew­an.

Alongside Premier Scott Moe, Saskatchew­an Environmen­t Minister Dustin Duncan, and our Saskatchew­an Party Government, I will continue to stand up for the Moose Jaw natural gas power plant project and continue standing up for Saskatchew­an. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of THE AUTHOR, AND DO NOT NECESSARIL­Y REflECT THE POSITION OF THIS publicatio­n.

 ??  ?? Warren Michelson, MLA
Warren Michelson, MLA

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