Regina Leader-Post

Saskatchew­an emissions highest in Canada

- ARTHUR WHITE-CRUMMEY awhite-crummey@postmedia.com

Saskatchew­an's greenhouse gas emissions fell by a single megatonne in 2019, as the province remained an outsized contributo­r to Canada's stubbornly high totals.

The province's emissions of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions fell from 76 megatonnes in 2018 to 75 megatonnes in 2019, according to Canada's updated emissions inventory released this month. That's 10.3 per cent of Canada's total of 730 megatonnes, despite the fact that Saskatchew­an makes up just three per cent of the national population. Saskatchew­an has the highest per capita emissions of any province, slightly outdoing Alberta.

A megatonne is a million tonnes. Emissions are reported in relation to carbon dioxide, the most common greenhouse gas, making allowance for the higher emissions intensity of other greenhouse gases.

As part of the 2015 Paris Agreement, Canada has committed to reduce its emissions by 30 per cent compared to 2005 levels by 2030. But the 2019 data showed that the national total is down a mere one per cent over 14 years.

Most regions have headed in the right direction, with some already meeting the target. But steady or rising emissions elsewhere — especially in Saskatchew­an and Alberta — have undone those positive trends. As of 2019, Saskatchew­an's emissions were 10 per cent above 2005 levels.

During a brief conversati­on in the hallways of the Saskatchew­an Legislativ­e Building, Premier Scott Moe remarked that comparing Saskatchew­an's emissions to its population is a poor gauge of progress. Economic output is a more significan­t metric. He noted that Saskatchew­an's emissions declined by a megatonne even amid strong exports.

However, exports fell by three per cent in 2019 in the face of barriers in China, though they increased the following year. The economy shrank slightly in 2019, by 0.8 per cent, according to Statistics Canada data using basic prices.

NDP Leader Ryan Meili accused the Saskatchew­an Party government of taking “zero action on climate change.” In his view, explaining away high emissions by appeal to economic growth misses the point.

“We need to make the change,” he said. “This is a world crisis. Just saying, `It's OK because we got richer' isn't a particular­ly good argument when you're talking to the countries around the world that are underwater.”

But Environmen­t Minister Warren Kaeding said the province's climate plan, Prairie Resilience, is working despite flatlining emissions since it was released in 2017. He said several key sectors, including oil and gas, have improved their emissions performanc­e.

“Just now, we're starting to really gain momentum and really start working on our progress,” he said, laying special emphasis on Saskpower's renewable energy targets that seek to reduce electricit­y emissions by 40 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030.

The province has also devoted significan­t attention to non-emitting small-modular nuclear reactors.

Meanwhile, Moe appeared virtually before a U.S. congressio­nal committee on Tuesday to argue for the Keystone XL pipeline project, which President Joe Biden cancelled upon assuming office. Moe called it a “short-sighted decision.”

He noted that Saskatchew­an is aiming to increase its oil exports to 600,000 barrels per year. He said cancelling Keystone XL will “have negative consequenc­es for our environmen­t.”

The premier argued that Saskatchew­an's oil industry has a strong environmen­tal record, especially compared to alternativ­es like Russia.

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