The Prince George Citizen

New gas plants should pay carbon levy on all emissions by 2030, advocates say

- Mia RABSON

OTTAWA — Climate-change advocates and renewable-fuel producers want Ottawa to make sure new natural-gas power plants have to pay a price for every ounce of their greenhouse-gas emissions by 2030.

Canada is finalizing the regulation­s for its carbonpric­ing system for big industrial emitters. The rules will apply to any facility that produces at least 50,000 tonnes of emissions a year, including electricit­y generated by fossil fuels such as coal, natural gas and diesel. Ottawa is weighing the need to reduce Canada’s emissions against a desire not to hurt consumers by forcing electricit­y companies to raise rates too quickly.

The Canadian Council on Renewable Electricit­y – whose members include producers of wind, solar, hydro and tidal power – and some environmen­t groups want Ottawa to make the system strong enough to discourage new fossil-fuel electricit­y plants.

“The idea is to send a signal that even for existing generation, the closer you get to 2030 the more emissions should be exposed to the carbon price,” said Jean-Francois Nolet, vice-president of the Canadian Wind Energy Associatio­n.

As the rules stand now, electricit­y producers will only pay the federal carbon levy on a small portion of their emissions.

Canada’s carbon pricing system has two components: the direct carbon levy that individual­s and smaller organizati­ons will pay on fuel they use to drive, heat their homes and power their electronic­s; and a separate levy for big industrial emitters.

Only provinces that don’t have their own carbon levies will be subjected to the federal systems. Right now those are Saskatchew­an, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick. The big-emitters system for industry will also be applied in Prince Edward Island, Yukon and Nunavut, which asked to use it.

The industrial system will see Ottawa determine the average emissions produced by each type of fuel, and the cap is set at 80 per cent of that average. Power companies will pay the carbon levy – $20 per tonne of greenhouse gas produced in 2019, and increasing regularly – only on the emissions over that cap.

Ottawa’s current proposal is that the cap be set at 800 tonnes per gigawatt-hour of electricit­y produced by coal, 550 tonnes for diesel and 370 tonnes for natural gas.

Nolet says the renewables industry is lobbying for Ottawa to ratchet down those caps by at least five per cent a year for existing facilities. For new facilities, he said the hope is the levy will be charged on 100 per cent of emissions by 2030.

Canada has 16 coal power plants left and intends to phase most of them out by 2030. There are more than 90 natural-gas plants, with 44 of them in the provinces affected by Ottawa’s carbon price.

Catherine Abreu, executive director of the Climate Action Network Canada, said there is a fear that natural gas will be the most common choice to replace coal, and while gas is less dirty than coal it still has significan­t emissions. A big Canadian natural-gas plant emits more than 1.5 million tonnes of greenhouse gases each year.

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