The Telegram (St. John's)

Record early voting in Alberta as green agenda hangs in balance

- NIA WILLIAMS AMBER BRACKEN

EDMONTON, Alta. — Polls opened in Canada’s main oilproduci­ng province Alberta on Monday in a tight election race that is expected to have a significan­t bearing on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s climate goals, which are already seen as lagging global peers.

Data on early voting showed more than 758,000 Albertans had already cast their ballot before polls opened, up from a record 700,476 in 2019 — suggesting a strong overall turnout is likely.

The battle between populist Premier Danielle Smith’s United Conservati­ve Party (UCP), which is seeking a second consecutiv­e term, and Rachel Notley’s left-leaning New Democratic Party (NDP) is expected to be extremely close, pollsters say, even though Alberta is traditiona­lly a conservati­ve bastion.

The result could reshape Trudeau’s climate agenda if the UCP wins, making it harder for Canada to meet its goal of cutting emissions 40 to 45 per cent below 2005 levels by the end of this decade.

Smith is opposed to many of Trudeau’s policies including an oil and gas emissions cap and a net-zero electricit­y grid by 2035, arguing they will hurt an energy sector that contribute­s more than 20 per cent to Alberta’s GDP.

Notley’s NDP, which ruled from 2015 to 2019 after a shock election victory that ended decades of conservati­ve rule in the province, is seen as more amenable to Liberal plans to rapidly cut emissions, though it also opposes the oil and gas emissions cap.

Both Notley and Smith voted in advance of polls opening.

Alberta is Canada’s highest-emitting province, largely due to vast oil sands operations in the northern boreal forest and produces 80 per cent of the country’s 4.9 million barrels per day of crude oil.

BMO Capital Markets analyst Jared Dziuba said both parties are committed to decarboniz­ation, but the pace and costs of the effort vary.

“We see the likely outcome of an NDP victory as (possibly) accelerate­d decarboniz­ation, but potentiall­y at much higher net costs to industry given its position on environmen­t and taxes,” Dziuba wrote in a note to clients, adding the UCP would likely support a steady pace of progress at a lower cost.

The next government is expected to consider new financial supports for carbon capture and storage, a key strategy to curb Alberta’s emissions from oil and gas and other industrial production.

The latest survey from polling firm Leger shows the right-wing UCP slightly ahead province-wide, backed by 49 per cent of decided voters versus 46 per cent for NDP. However, the NDP holds a modest lead in Alberta’s corporate oil capital Calgary, a key battlegrou­nd where a number of seats could go to either party, according to a poll from Thinkhq Public Affairs.

The winning party must take 44 seats out of 87 electoral districts to control a majority of seats in the legislatur­e.

 ?? REUTERS ?? New Democratic Party leader Rachel Notley speaks during a provincial election campaign rally in Calgary on May 27.
REUTERS New Democratic Party leader Rachel Notley speaks during a provincial election campaign rally in Calgary on May 27.

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