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Oilpatch Leaders Warn Ottawa’s New Carbon-Pricing Proposal Lacks Real-World ‘Business Sense’


These translations are done via Google Translate

Measures could divert investment away from Canada just as global competition is heating up, says industry group

By Meghan Potkins

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Original: financialpost.com/commodities/energy/oil-gas/oilpatch-ottawa-carbon-pricing-business-sense


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Ottawa’s environment ministry is floating possible changes to carbon-pricing rules for industry that are stoking fresh anxiety in the oilpatch, with industry groups and experts warning the proposals could conflict with the Carney government’s push to increase energy exports.

In a discussion paper outlining the potential changes, Environment and Climate Change Canada says it is looking to strengthen Canada’s industrial carbon markets, which have suffered from weak prices in recent years. But industry and independent experts say the measures will also raise costs for energy and manufacturing companies facing tougher global competition.

“It would have very negative consequences for jobs and businesses across Canada, not just within oil and gas,” said Tristan Goodman, president of the Explorers and Producers Association of Canada, which represents natural gas and conventional oil producers.

“It’s an extreme approach that provides very little flexibility to the (businesses) it would apply to. It’s very costly to implement and it looks like it’s designed, quite frankly, by a group of academics that don’t have any real business sense.”

In its paper, the federal environment ministry argues its aim is to protect competitiveness while reducing emissions, and it invited industries and stakeholders to provide feedback by Jan. 30.

The proposals arrive at a sensitive moment as Alberta and Ottawa negotiate a carbon-equivalency agreement under their recent bilateral memorandum of understanding on energy. While such a deal could exempt the province from adopting many of the proposed measures, uncertainty over the outcome of those talks — and over the direction of federal climate policy — has rattled producers in the oilpatch.

The discussion paper has also surfaced a potential fault line in the industry, as Ottawa floats the possibility of dramatically expanding carbon pricing to cover smaller emitters.

One option under consideration would slash the minimum emissions threshold for mandatory carbon pricing from 100,000 tonnes a year to 10,000 tonnes — and lower still for conventional oil and gas — a move that could pull hundreds of smaller operators into the system for the first time.

Critics say the move would disproportionately raise regulatory burdens on smaller companies — including producers pumping as little as 500 barrels per day with a handful of employees — for minimal cuts to overall emissions, according to ARC Energy Research Institute analysts.

The report also raises options that would tighten systems like Alberta’s industrial carbon market by requiring them to ensure demand for carbon credits exceeds supply, reducing excess credits and narrowing the ways companies can lower their carbon bill.

Industry leaders have argued the proposals run contrary to the stated goals of the Carney government to increase Canadian energy exports and could contradict parts of the recent Canada-Alberta memorandum of understanding on energy.

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