National Post

THE HIGH COST OF ACHIEVING ZERO CARBON EMISSIONS

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The Liberals unveiled a climate action plan on Tuesday that promised to push Canada to become carbon neutral by 2050. But the plan was immediatel­y criticized for lacking detail of how it would happen and, just as importantl­y, exactly how much money and economic disruption such an ambitious target would cost Canadians. Under current Liberal policy, Canada still will not meet its shorter-term target to cut carbon emissions by 30 per cent below the 2005 level by 2030. Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau admitted that the plan to push Canada to net-zero emissions by 2050, was an “ambitious target” but “doable.” When pressed to provide details on how exactly the net-zero emissions target will be achieved in 30 years, former environmen­t minister Catherine Mckenna said, “We may not know exactly how to get there, but that’s the same of all countries that have committed to this.” She added that right now, the goal was to “get elected.” “If we are re- elected, we will look at how best to do this.” Vanmala Subramania­m spoke to climate policy experts to gauge what exactly it would take for Canada to achieve that goal by 2050.

OI L AND GAS SECTOR

The oil and gas industry is Canada’s biggest greenhouse gas contributo­r. Climate experts on both ends of the ideologica­l spectrum tend to agree that in order to achieve carbon neutrality in 30 years, there will either have to be a dramatic transforma­tion of Canada’s oil and gas sector that sees it transition­ing into a clean energy sector, or massive innovation­s in technology around capturing and storing carbon.

“Being carbon neutral by 2050 means that in the long term, we can’t have an oil and gas sector here. We need to talk about how to transition our fossil fuel workers out of the sectors implement policies that can support communitie­s dependent on this sector,” said Kathryn Harrison, a professor at the University of British Columbia whose primary area of research is environmen­tal policy.

“We need to think in terms of, ‘ How can we gradually wind down our fossil fuel industry?’ ” Harrison says.

That’s simply not feasible or realistic, argues Jack Mintz, President’s Fellow at the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy. “Demand for our oil and gas is increasing worldwide with more people in developing countries becoming middle class. Our oil and gas is used in single- use plastics, automobile­s, bunker fuel, aviation fuel. Every country will have to commit to being carbon neutral for demand for our bitumen to end.”

TRANSPORTA­TION

In Canada, transporta­tion is the second largest contributo­r to carbon emissions. Achieving carbon neutrality by 2050 will involve two massive changes in the way we commute — a much larger dependence on public transporta­tion and the complete phase-out of fossil fuel vehicles.

“People ask me, well, how much will an electric vehicle cost? And my answer is, do you need a zero- emission vehicle? How about massive investment in public transporta­tion that will make transit more affordable and reduce our dependence on cars,” says Harrison.

Marc Lee, a senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es, believes that eliminatin­g fossil fuel vehicles is not an unrealisti­c goal over the next 30 years. “You could say af

ter 2050, no one is allowed to drive a fossil fuel vehicle by imposing a carbon tax that makes it much more expensive to own one, and to manufactur­e one.”

Mintz points out that not only are emissions created when you’re trying to build car batteries for electric vehicles, but if electricit­y generation is still fossil fuel dependent, then a mass use of electric vehicles will only serve to increase emissions from the grid.

ELECTRICIT­Y GENERATION

Most of Canada already relies on non- fossil fuel sources like hydro and nuclear energy for electricit­y generation. A carbon neutral Canada by 2050, will involve turning converting those remaining areas dependent on fossil fuel for electricit­y generation into clean energy sources.

“We already have 82 per cent of renewable energy with hydro and nuclear. We don’t have a lot of room for major emissions reductions there. Provinces are already phasing out coal, and transition­ing to natural gas,” says Mintz.

“In places like Alberta and Saskatchew­an, you will use more wind and solar and biofuels for electricit­y generation along with a little bit of natural gas to back up when the wind isn’t blowing and the sun isn’t shining,” says Mark Jaccard, a professor at the School of Resource and Environmen­tal Management at Simon Fraser University.

IMPACT ON GLOBAL C L IMATE

It is unclear what impact Canada’s commitment to carbon neutrality by 2050 will have on the planet, but Jaccard’s perspectiv­e is that a country only acts on a global problem “to be part of a global effort.”

Mintz points out that Canada is responsibl­e for just three per cent of worldwide global emissions. “If you take the biggest countries — China, India, Russia, U. S. and the EU — they are responsibl­e for two-thirds of worldwide global emissions. China has made no such commitment to be carbon neutral. We shouldn’t try to move ahead when other countries aren’t doing it. If we kill the oil and gas sector, that will be more for disunity in this country than anything.”

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