National Post

FINANCIAL POST

OTTAWA’S CARBON TAX UPDATE DIVIDES INDUSTRIES.

- GEOFFREY MORGAN AND JESSE SNYDER

CALGARY/OTTAWA • In an attempt to boost competitiv­eness and protect tradeexpos­ed industries, the federal government will dole out more in carbon-tax subsidies to industrial emitters, as new details emerge on the countrywid­e carbon tax framework.

The Ministry of Environmen­t and Climate Change updated its carbon tax policy framework this week and revealed that subsidy rates for industrial emitters were up across the board but that cement, steel-making, lime and nitrogen fertilizer companies would be entitled to the highest subsidies.

The moves, experts say, will help protect companies that compete directly with products from jurisdicti­ons with no carbon taxes but it’s unclear on how helpful the subsidies will be. At the same time, the new framework has divided industries against each other with those receiving higher subsidies applauding the changes, and those left out demanding an explanatio­n.

“We’ve been clear since the beginning that we would consult with industry and environmen­tal experts to find the best ways to reduce emissions, improve energy efficiency and stay competitiv­e — and that’s exactly what we’ve done,” Environmen­t and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna said in an emailed statement. “We can’t afford to let big polluters off the hook.”

She did not provide an explanatio­n as to why four industries — cement, steelmakin­g, lime and nitrogen fertilizer — are considered “high competitiv­e risk” businesses. Companies in those industries will be entitled to a 90-per-cent subsidy rate on their carbon tax burden, compared with a previously published subsidy rate of 70 per cent.

“We’re a major trading industry and we’re highly exposed on the trade side of things,” said Clyde Graham, executive vice-president at Fertilizer Canada, which represents the industry, adding that he welcomed the changes that help ease the tax burden on companies.

Nitrogen fertilizer producers export roughly half of their total production and fertilizer facilities burn natural gas in the manufactur­ing process, representi­ng most of their emissions.

“Our industry is always concerned with being as competitiv­e as it possibly can,” Graham said.

In May, Cement Associatio­n of Canada vice-president Adam Auer urged a Senate committee on the carbon tax framework “to be attuned to the reality that our competitor­s in import and export markets don’t have similar pricing systems.”

He said B.C. cement plants have been losing market share since the province introduced a carbon tax in 2008, saying imports of cement have climbed from six per cent to 40 per cent.

Other industries that have not been classified as “high competitiv­e risk” are also seeing a higher subsidy rate of 80 per cent, compared with a previous rate of 70 per cent but some say that isn’t enough.

“I find it problemati­c that they put out a reference number a few months ago, they’ve now come out and changed that number for some industries and they haven’t given us the rationale,” Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers CEO Tim McMillan said.

“That there’s no rationale for it really is a concern. It seems that politics is driving these policies more than the economics and the environmen­tal outcomes that we’re looking to achieve,” McMillan said.

Oil and gas production should be “at the top of the list” of trade-exposed industries because oil and gas is Canada’s largest export category, McMillan said. In addition, oil and gas production in the U.S. has increased exponentia­lly in recent years, and American oil and gas now competes against domestic production.

Calgary-based oil companies currently pay carbon taxes under Alberta’s Climate Leadership Plan but also have assets in other provinces, including refineries in B.C., Ontario and Quebec. In addition, the federal carbon tax is expected to exceed Alberta’s in the coming years, at which point energy companies would pay a provincial and federal portion.

Industries and firms still concerned with the framework can now provide the environmen­t ministry with more data on competitiv­eness as consultati­ons on the carbon tax continues.

“We insist that this data be assessed really diligently and that only critical data be admitted for that assessment,” Pembina Institute federal policy director Isabelle Turcotte said of the next round of consultati­on.

The Pembina Institute is concerned that industry groups will submit irrelevant data on costs in different jurisdicti­ons rather than data specific to carbon pricing in an attempt to lower their overall tax burden, she said.

“Pricing carbon pollution is really essential to costeffect­ively and efficientl­y address the challenge of climate change and to make sure there’s an incentive for Canadian industries to innovate,” she said, adding Ottawa should stay the course and implement the carbon tax.

The $20-per-tonne carbon tax is expected to come into force in January and will apply to all emitters, but is designed to target companies that emit more than twothirds of their direct competitor­s.

Those companies that emit more than their competitor­s will pay the carbon tax but can deduct either 80 or 90 per cent of their carbon tax burden. Companies that emit less than the majority of their peers will effectivel­y pay no carbon tax and, given the subsidies, earn credits for having lower-than-average emissions.

“It reduces the carbon tax payment but it doesn’t reduce the price on each tonne of carbon emitted,” University of Calgary assistant economics professor Jennifer Winter said of the system. “They’re getting subsidized based on their output.”

Winter said the subsidies should help protect industries that are at risk of becoming uncompetit­ive relative to other jurisdicti­ons as a result of carbon taxes, but it’s not clear at this point to what extent the subsidies will help.

“The issue right now is there isn’t a whole lot of research on leakage because it’s a fairy new policy area,” Winter said. Carbon leakage refers to industries relocating to jurisdicti­ons with lower environmen­tal regulation­s to avoid higher costs.

THEY’RE GETTING SUBSIDIZED BASED ON THEIR OUTPUT.

 ?? CAITLIN O’HARA / BLOOMBERG ?? The Cement Associatio­n of Canada says B.C. cement plants are facing foreign competitor­s who don’t pay a carbon tax.
CAITLIN O’HARA / BLOOMBERG The Cement Associatio­n of Canada says B.C. cement plants are facing foreign competitor­s who don’t pay a carbon tax.

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