BC Restructures GHG Emissions Regulatory Framework in Light of LNG Projects

 
On October 20, 2014, Environment Minister Mary Polak announced the first part of a restructuring of BC’s GHG emissions regulatory framework with the release of Bill 2, also known as the Greenhouse Gas Industrial Reporting and Control Act. This piece of legislation will replace the Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Cap and Trade) Act that came into force on May 29, 2008. The restructuring will continue with the release of the relevant Regulations under the new Act once it is given Royal Assent and comes into force. These regulations will include a new GHG Reporting Regulation and a new Emission Offset Regulation. It is expected that the reporting thresholds in the new GHG Reporting Regulation and the resulting obligations thereunder will remain the same. Tim Lesiuk, Executive Director and Chief Negotiator at Climate Action Secretariat, emphasized in a technical briefing the importance and responsibility of companies assuming to be below the lowest reporting threshold of 10,000 t CO2e annually (called non-reporting entities), to also monitor and document their GHG emissions in order to mitigate the risk of regulatory non-compliance and provide proof of their status as a non-reporting entity in case of an inspection.
A new Emission Offset Regulation is expected to offer an independent offset certification process from the BC Government’s Carbon Neutral purchase program. This will be achieved through a new certification and registry system. The BC Government’s existing Carbon Neutral purchase program conducted by the Climate Investment Branch will continue, but they will source their offsets from the new certification and registry system. Existing offset purchase contracts are expected to be grandfathered into the new system.
The functional new aspect in Bill 2 is the introduction of a new carbon intensity performance requirement. This carbon intensity performance target, called Regulated Operations’ Emission Limits in the Act is an additional requirement beyond the reporting obligation that only applies to industries that are listed in the Schedule of Regulated Operations and Emission Limits in the Act.
The only two listed industries so far are coal-based electricity generation operation with a limit of 0 tonnes carbon dioxide equivalent emissions and liquefied natural gas operations with a limit of 0.16 carbon dioxide equivalent tonnes for each tonne of liquefied natural gas produced. However, additional industries may be added and the BC Government has indicated that it will be announcing climate change measures in other sectors going forward.
The emission target carbon intensity performance quantification is limited to the facility level and therefore does not include any upstream or downstream emissions outside of the facility boundary. In order to meet their obligations, regulated entities with prescribed emission limits will have several compliance mechanisms available to them. In particular, they can:
• improve energy efficiency or increase the use of clean electricity through facility design;
• acquire emissions offsets by investing in BC-based emission reduction projects at market prices; or
• contribute to a technology fund at a rate of $25 per tonne of CO2e.

Besides setting up a new technology fund, Bill 2 also requires the establishment of a registry for the purposes of the Act. This registry will be the only place where offset units and earned credits, resulting from performance below the emissions limit, are tracked. This is also the only place where transactions under the Act can be executed for compliance purposes.
If you have any questions about Bill 2 and the proposed changes to the BC emission offset regime or their potential impacts on your operations or offset project, please contact GHG Accounting Services.