The Guardian (USA)

Fury as Alberta cuts renewables during Canada’s worst fire season ever

- Leyland Cecco

A decision by Canada’s largest oil and gas-producing province to halt new wind and solar projects has prompted disbelief among environmen­tal groups and economists. The move comes as the country struggles with its worst wildfire season on record, a situation that experts agree is worsened by the climate crisis and a reliance on fossil fuels.

Alberta last week announced a sixmonth moratorium on large solar and wind projects so it can review policies surroundin­g the projects’ constructi­on and impact on the power grid, as well as rules for their eventual decommissi­oning.

Since then, provincial and federal ministers have sparred over the controvers­ial decision, exposing tensions between Alberta, which favours natural gas for power generation, and the governing Liberals, who have the broader ambition to decarboniz­e electrical grids across the country by 2035.

On Tuesday, the federal government unveiled its initial plans to transition to clean energy nationwide, ahead of its Clean Energy Strategy in 2024.

Acknowledg­ing provinces’ responsibi­lity for electricit­y infrastruc­ture and delivery, the government also highlighte­d its own federal authority over environmen­tal regulation­s and “strategic investment­s” to attain broader climate goals.

“This came as a complete shock to the industry. And it’s really a broader shock to all industries in Alberta, for a government to take such a drastic action without any consultati­on,” said Jorden Dye, acting director of Business Renewables Centre Canada.

Provincial officials have expressed concern over the rapid pace of investment and developmen­t of renewablee­nergy projects in the province – one of the sunniest and windiest regions of the country.

But Dye says that the province has successful­ly balanced tensions between the speed of developmen­t and residents’ concerns for decades. “We’ve conducted regulatory reviews for both coal bed methane production and the oil sands industry for years – all without pausing developmen­t,” he said, adding that the decision even hurts the oil and gas industry – an increasing­ly large player in the province’s renewables market.

“I’ve had many conversati­ons over the last week, ranging from CFOs of oil and gas companies to my rural Alberta farming family. And no one can understand why this drastic of an action was taken. Because it’s just not how this province conducts business.”

Nearly C$2bn worth of projects have

been proposed in recent months in the province, and Dye warns companies might look to other jurisdicti­ons to develop them.

The decision to freeze projects is a “mistake”, the head of the Canadian Renewable Energy Associatio­n said in a statement, warning the move will weaken investor confidence in the province, which represents 75% of the country’s renewable growth since last year.

There are now nearly 3,500MW worth of wind and solar projects under constructi­on in the province, worth more than C$2.7bn, that won’t be affected by the decision, according to reporting by the Globe and Mail. The vast majority of these projects are on private land.

With the scope of the moratorium unclear, the province’s plan could strand as many as 100 projects that were set to generate enough energy to power 3m homes and are worth at least C$25bn in investment­s, according to the Pembina Institute, an Albertabas­ed energy thinkthank.

In recent years, the province has taken controvers­ial decisions that have united unlikely groups, most notably Alberta’s short-lived plans to open coal mining in the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains. Those plans united environmen­talists, ranchers and a famous country singer against the United Conservati­ve government, which quickly backtracke­d.

The decision to halt renewables has baffled economists, environmen­tal groups and business executives, whose companies are now questionin­g hefty investment­s in the province.

Nearly one-third of Alberta’s grid is powered by renewables and the province has shifted away from coal at a far faster rate than expected. When the previous New Democratic party announced in 2015 it would phase out coal power, it pledged to accomplish that feat by 2030. But the province will attain the goal this year – seven years early.

“It’s clearly an ideologica­l decision, taken at a time when climate impacts have hit Canada so devastatin­gly. It is completely irresponsi­ble to halt the deployment of cost-effective and proven climate solutions,” said Caroline Brouillett­e, executive director of the Climate Action Network. “The province is sending the message they’re not open for business. These projects are already happening, and they’re not only good for the environmen­t, they’re good for the economy.”

Brouillett­e also pointed to longstandi­ng issues over orphaned gas wells and leaks at tailings ponds that have left Indigenous communitie­s fearing for the safety of their water supplies. “To the premier, massive tailings spills that endanger Indigenous communitie­s don’t constitute an emergency – but the potential for expanding cost-effective and proven climate solutions at a time when Canada is burning somehow poses a threat,” she said.

“I really hope that logic and facts can prevail for the sake of Alberta, their economy, jobs, and access to a safe and affordable energy supply.”

 ?? Photograph: Todd Korol/Reuters ?? A wind farm near the town of Pincher Creek, Alberta. One-third of the province’s electric grid is powered by renewables.
Photograph: Todd Korol/Reuters A wind farm near the town of Pincher Creek, Alberta. One-third of the province’s electric grid is powered by renewables.

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