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Advisory group recommends penalties for heavy oilsands emitters if cap hit

CALGARY — Oilsands producers could face steep fines and suspended projects if industry comes close to hitting a mandated 100-megatonne limit under recommendations proposed by Alberta’s Oil Sands Advisory Group.

But the non-binding report sets out a series of policies options to help avoid reaching that point, including requiring the use of better technology, setting out emissions management plans and costs, and improved regulations.

Advisory group co-chair Dave Collyer said the increased emissions reporting and forecasting in the near-term will help to achieve the lower emissions-intensity goal.

“That transparency and awareness, in fact, does drive behavioural change,” Collyer said.

“So there’s a whole suite of recommendations that I characterize as more in the carrot category, to try and create the right environment to drive the behaviours.”

The penalties for industry would only kick in when industry looks to be within a year of hitting the cap. The penalties could include forcing those with higher-than-average emissions intensity to reduce them or face fines proposed at $200 a tonne of carbon. The government could also suspend projects that haven’t started construction.

Collyer said that while the plan could hit higher emitters, it’s just part of where global expectations on climate action are headed.

“People have to accept that in the world we’re likely to be in, carbon intensity matters. And if you’re on the wrong part of the carbon curve, you’re going to be disadvantaged. It’s the same way as being on the wrong part of the cost curve.”

Wildrose Leader Brian Jean said in a statement that giving the government authority to suspend projects would further chill investment in the oil and gas sector, and is a clear cap on economic growth.

Collyer said when the cap might be reached is much debated, but there is a general sense that under business the oilsands would hit the cap by about 2030, or somewhere around four million barrels a day.

The oilsands industry currently emits about 70 megatonnes of greenhouse gases, but based on exceptions to the cap the number is closer to 60 megatonnes, Collyer said.

Those exemptions include the electricity portion of co-generation, as well as experimental and enhanced recovery operations. Upgraders that started after 2015 will be subject to a separate 10 megatonne cap.

To better understand how the industry is performing, the advisory group recommended establishing annual and 10-year forecasts on emissions.

It also suggested reviews on the system and how facilities might be affected as the oilsands hits 80, 90 and 95 megatonnes.

Alberta Environment Minister Shannon Phillips said the measures recommended by the advisory group, combined with the carbon price, look to provide enough near-term incentives — and the government is not considering adding more.

“There’s really a package of proposals here to improve our performance,” said Phillips. “So yes, the cap is a safety net, but not necessarily a relevant determination because we have done our work in advance of reaching it.”

Phillips said the government will review the non-binding recommendations and begin stakeholder consultations, with an aim to have the regulations implemented by early 2018.

Terry Abel, executive vice-president at the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, said that policies that foster technological innovation sound encouraging and align with industry goals.  

The 18-member advisory group included an industry caucus headed by Collyer that included six oilsands companies, an environmental caucus led by campaigner Tzeporah Berman, and a community caucus led by Melody Lepine, director of government and industry relations at the Mikisew Cree First Nation.

Berman, who was a controversial appointment because of her strong views against the oilsands, is leaving the advisory group along with several other members as it transitions to a different phase.

 

Ian Bickis, The Canadian Press

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Controversial environmentalist among five released from Alberta oilsands panel

EDMONTON — Controversial environmentalist Tzeporah Berman is out as a member of a government-appointed committee advising Alberta on how to develop the oilsands.

Berman and four other members of Alberta’s Oil Sands Advisory Group were let go after the 18-member panel wrapped up the first two phases of its consultations.

Environment Minister Shannon Phillips says Berman and the others contributed critical expertise in the early stages, but the panel’s focus is now narrowing.

“The first two tasks were really quite outward-facing tasks — the conversation with other Canadians, our international reputation on taking climate action,” Phillips said Friday in Calgary.

“She and a couple other voices that were there for an external perspective, their work is now finished, or coming to be finished.”

The panel was struck almost a year ago to advise the province on oilsands development as Alberta moves away from coal-fired power and toward more environmentally friendly energy.

Berman, a former Greenpeace director, had become a symbol of contradictory government policy on the oilsands, and opposition politicians had repeatedly called for her to be removed.

She pocketed almost $23,000 advising Premier Rachel Notley’s government on environmentally sustainable oilsands development, while also advocating against projects such as the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion that would help the industry and boost the provincial economy.

She has compared the oilsands to the fiery fictional wasteland of Mordor in “Lord of the Rings” and supported the B.C. NDP in the recent provincial election for its stance on killing the Trans Mountain project.

Notley had refused to fire Berman. The premier argued a diversity of voices is healthy. Phillips flatly denied the B.C. election played any part in Berman’s departure.

Progressive Conservative caucus leader Ric McIver said the decision was long overdue.

“After months of talking down Alberta and the hard-working people in the oilsands, we are happy to see that Berman has been asked to leave,” said McIver.

“Including diverse voices on this panel is important, but to appoint an anti-oilsands, eco-warrior as the co-chair was irresponsible governing from the NDP. We just hope Berman hasn’t tarnished Alberta’s reputation.”

Todd Loewen, environment critic for the Opposition Wildrose party, said it didn’t make sense to allow someone who opposed the oil industry to dictate oilsands growth.

“This government is far too comfortable sending signals to investors that so-called social licence and aiming to please eco-radicals is more important than taking sensible measures to enhance environmental protections.”

The advisory panel on Friday recommended a series of escalating measures, including financial penalties, to ensure greenhouse gas emissions from the oilsands remain within a mandated 100-megatonne limit.

Environmental advocates Karen Mahon and Alison Ronson, along with oil executives Christa Seaman and Lloyd Visser, were also taken off the panel.

Dean Bennett, The Canadian Press

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Visit Bluewave Energy at the Bonnyville Oil & Gas Show

If you’re going to be in Bonnyville between June 21st and 22nd, make sure you take time to visit Bluewave Energy at the Bonnyville Oil & Gas Show at booth 2013. Having opened up four new locations in Alberta and Saskatchewan the past year, Bluewave Energy is now meeting propane demand in Bonnyville, Lloydminster, Oxbow, … Read more

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US rig count rises this week 6 to 933

HOUSTON — The number of rigs exploring for oil and natural gas in the U.S. rose by six this week to 933.

A year ago, just 424 rigs were active.

Houston oilfield services company Baker Hughes said Friday that 747 rigs sought oil and 186 explored for natural gas this week.

Among major oil- and gas-producing states, North Dakota added three rigs while Alaska, Colorado and New Mexico gained two rigs each. California and Louisiana increased by one apiece.

Oklahoma declined by four rigs and Wyoming was down one.

Arkansas, Kansas, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah and West Virginia were unchanged.

The U.S. rig count peaked at 4,530 in 1981. It bottomed out in May of 2016 at 404.

The Associated Press

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Emails reiterate EPA chief’s ties to fossil fuel interests

WASHINGTON — Newly obtained emails underscore just how closely Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt co-ordinated with fossil fuel companies while serving as Oklahoma’s state attorney general, a position in which he frequently sued to block federal efforts to curb planet-warming carbon emissions.

The latest batch of Pruitt’s emails, provided to The Associated Press on Thursday, runs more than 4,000 pages. They include schedules and lists of speaking engagements from the years before Pruitt became the nation’s top environmental watchdog, recounting dozens of meetings between Pruitt, members of his staff, and executives and lobbyists from the coal, oil and gas industries. Many of the calendar entries were blacked out, making it impossible for the public to know precisely where Pruitt travelled or with whom he met.

A June 2016 email that was released showed a board member of the Domestic Energy Producers Alliance seeking a last-minute meeting with Pruitt’s team to brief them “regarding a pending federal tax issue that is related to the state’s position on the Clean Power Plan.”

The trade group represents independent oil and gas producers, including the billionaire Harold Hamm, a political backer of Pruitt and frequent adviser to President Donald Trump. At the time, Oklahoma was one of more than two dozen mostly GOP-led states suing the EPA in federal court to stop the Obama administration’s effort to regulate carbon emissions from coal-fired power plants.

“Greg is Govt Relations for Denbury Resources and is a gem of a dude,” wrote DEPA Executive Director Pete Regan, referring to oil and gas lobbyist Greg Schnacke. “He serves on DEPA executive Comm w Harold Hamm. AG Pruitt was on multiple exec calls on 2015 giving updates re ‘sue and settle’, endangered species cases, etc. … Greg worked closely with Sen. Bob Dole and has great stories.”

A spokesman for Pruitt at the EPA declined to comment, referring questions to the office of current Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter. Prior to his appointment by the state’s Republican governor, Hunter had worked as a top staffer for Pruitt.

Democratic senators fought unsuccessfully to get copies of Pruitt’s emails from Oklahoma prior to his February confirmation vote. Shortly after Pruitt was sworn in as EPA administrator, an Oklahoma judge ruled that Pruitt had been violating the state’s public records law by withholding his correspondence for at least two years. The judge ordered their release following a lawsuit filed by the Center for Media and Democracy, a left-leaning advocacy group.

More than 7,500 emails were released under court order in February, some of which raised questions about the accuracy of Pruitt’s testimony during his Senate confirmation hearing. In both a written statement and under questioning from a Democratic lawmaker, Pruitt said he had always used a state email account for government business and a private account for personal matters.

Yet once the emails were released, they showed Pruitt had occasionally used his private email account to communicate with his staff and others, including lobbyists. It is not illegal in Oklahoma for public officials to use private email as long as they are retained and made available as public records.

Last month, Pruitt sent a letter to the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee seeking to clarify his earlier testimony about the use of a private email account.

“My practice is to conduct official business through official channels, including my state-provided email account,” Pruitt wrote. “Under Oklahoma law, political matters must be transacted using personal email accounts. That includes emails concerning political matters that may arguably also touch on state business.”

Though Pruitt wrote that he had since provided all emails from his personal account to the Oklahoma attorney general’s office for review, the EPA chief contends he now has no say in how or when Hunter might choose to release them.

Hunter’s spokeswoman, Terri Watkins, said his office is continuing to provide documents as they are reviewed and become available.

___

Causey reported from Oklahoma City. Associated Press writers Seth Borenstein in Washington, Jason Dearen in Gainesville, Florida, Tammy Webber in Chicago, John Flesher in Traverse City, Michigan, Emily Schmall in Fort Worth, Texas, and Tafi Mukunyadzi in Little Rock, Arkansas, contributed to this story.

___

Follow AP environmental reporter Michael Biesecker at www.Twitter.com/mbieseck

Michael Biesecker And Adam Kealoha Causey, The Associated Press

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Figuring Out Oil's Long-Term Price Requires New Math: Gadfly

June 15, 2017 (Bloomberg Gadfly) This question consumes the industry — and markets — no matter what prices are on any given day. Back in 2000, when mega-mergers formed giants like Exxon Mobil Corp., it was typical to plug roughly $20 a barrel into valuation models. Only a few years ago, we were being told that “$100 … Read more

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Oil Set for Longest Run of Weekly Losses Since 2015 Amid Glut

June 16, 2016 (Bloomberg)  Oil headed for the longest run of weekly losses since August 2015 as OPEC member Libya restored production just as the surplus in the U.S. showed few signs of abating. While futures added 0.9 percent in New York, they’re down 2.1 percent for the week, a fourth straight decline. U.S. inventories … Read more

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The CEO Who Called Canada's Stock Bottom Sees $90 Oil by 2020

June 16, 2017 (Bloomberg) Early last year, Jean-Guy Desjardins correctly predicted that Canadian equities were due for a rebound. He’s now saying oil prices will double, taking energy stocks along for the ride. “The fundamentals of the global supply-demand relationship are favoring higher oil prices,” Desjardins, chief executive officer of Fiera Capital Corp., said in an … Read more

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Five Things World Business will be Talking About Today

June 16, 2017 (Bloomberg)  The Bank of Japan keeps policy unchanged, U.S. political tensions escalate, and Greece gets another lifeline. Here are some of the things people in markets are talking about today. Central bank week The Bank of Japan left policy unchanged overnight, saying that improving private consumption would support the growing economy. Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, … Read more

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Westcore Energy Ltd. Provides Drilling Update at Flaxcombe

FOR: WESTCORE ENERGY LTD.TSX VENTURE SYMBOL: WTRDate issue: June 16, 2017Time in: 9:00 AM eAttention:
SASKATOON, SASKATCHEWAN–(Marketwired – June 16, 2017) – Westcore Energy Ltd.
(“Westcore” or the “Company”) (TSX VENTURE:WTR) announces that it has c…

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Primeline Energy Issues 825,563 Shares to GRF

FOR: PRIMELINE ENERGY HOLDINGS INC.TSX VENTURE SYMBOL: PEHDate issue: June 16, 2017Time in: 8:19 AM eAttention:
HONG KONG, CHINA–(Marketwired – June 16, 2017) –
NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. NEWS WIRE SERVICES, OR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED
STATES.
P…

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