Times Colonist

Oil and gas sector warns emissions cap could lead to production curtailmen­ts

- AMANDA STEPHENSON

CALGARY — Canada’s oil and gas industry has warned that Ottawa’s emissions cap framework could result in significan­t production curtailmen­ts by companies and higher energy prices for consumers.

The plan to have the oil and gas sector cut its emissions by more than a third of 2019 levels by 2030 is meant to “set a limit on pollution, not production,” the federal government said in a statement announcing the framework on Thursday.

But the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers (CAPP), the country’s largest fossil fuel industry group, said the plan is a de facto production cap. While the industry is working to reduce its emissions, CAPP said, the speed and scope of progress that the government is asking for is too ambitious.

“At a time when the country’s citizens are experienci­ng a substantia­l affordabil­ity crisis, coincident with record budget deficits, the federal government risks curtailing the energy Canadians rely on, along with jobs and government revenues the energy sector contribute­s to Canada,” the organizati­on said in a statement.

The federal government’s long-promised emissions cap has been fought tooth-and-nail by this country’s fossil fuel sector since it was first proposed by the Liberals in the 2021 election.

The draft framework unveiled Thursday requires a smaller cut to emissions than was initially estimated in the government’s emissions reduction plan last year, and Environmen­t Minister Steven Guilbeault said it was developed after extensive consultati­on with industry and other stakeholde­rs to make sure it is achievable.

But industry leaders on Thursday said hitting the federal government’s targets is not possible — at least not without significan­tly reducing this country’s oil and gas production.

Brian Schmidt, president and CEO of Tamarack Valley Energy Ltd., said his company has spent tens of millions of dollars in the past few years on reducing methane emissions intensity from its operations.

But he said that his company has oil and gas wells covering a wide geographic area of Alberta, and there is no single-technology magic bullet that can decarboniz­e its extraction processes as rapidly as Ottawa is demanding.

“It’s very difficult, because of the spread-out nature of our business, to apply any sort of mitigative measure like carbon capture. We’ll be left with no other option but to shut in [production],” Schmidt said.

The emissions cap would take the form of a cap-and-trade system, giving companies some leeway if they can’t achieve the 35 to 38 per cent reduction targets. Emitters will be able to buy offset credits or contribute to a decarboniz­ation fund that would lower that requiremen­t to cutting just 20 to 23 per cent.

Oil and gas production accounts for more than one-quarter of Canada’s emissions and Guilbeault said capping their emissions is critical to meeting Canada’s climate targets.

But oil and gas companies feel it’s unfair to single out their sector, especially since Canada already has layers of carbon policy — in particular, a carbon-pricing system — which are designed to bring emissions down over time.

Many companies have already announced their own ambitious emissions-reduction plans, without a legislated cap in place. However, they have been criticized by environmen­talists for not moving fast enough.

The Pathways Alliance, for example, a consortium of Canada’s largest oilsands companies, says it has spent $1.8 billion since 2021 on decarboniz­ation efforts. It has proposed spending $16.5 billion to build a massive carbon capture and storage network in northern Alberta.

Though it has not yet made a final investment decision that would see that project move ahead, Pathways has said the project could help its member companies achieve 32 per cent emissions reduction below 2019 levels by 2030.

In a statement on Thursday, Pathways Alliance president Kendall Dilling said the organizati­on is still evaluating the emissions cap framework to determine how it might impact oilsands operations.

While Dilling said the group remains committed to building its large-scale carbon capture project, he added that imposing an emissions cap with additional regulatory complexity “does nothing to advance the certainty necessary for the planned multibilli­on-dollar decarboniz­ation projects to proceed.”

 ?? JEFF McINTOSH, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A flare stack burns off excess gas at a processing facility near Crossfield, Alta. Canada’s oil and gas industry says the speed the government is asking for emission cuts is too ambitious.
JEFF McINTOSH, THE CANADIAN PRESS A flare stack burns off excess gas at a processing facility near Crossfield, Alta. Canada’s oil and gas industry says the speed the government is asking for emission cuts is too ambitious.

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