Alberta’s new Premier, Rachel Notley, expects to have a long-term climate change strategy in place for the province before she travels to the Paris Climate Conference (COP21) in December 2015. In taking up the mantle of climate leadership, Alberta’s Minister of Environment and Parks, Shannon Phillips, announced on June 25, 2015 that the government is moving forward with a two-step process for renewing the province’s climate change policy.
The centrepiece of Alberta’s climate change program is the Specified Gas Emitters Regulation (SGER), which came into force in 2007. Under the current regime, Alberta requires any facility emitting 100,000 tons or more of greenhouse gases (GHG) a year to reduce their emissions intensity by 12%. Following Minister Phillips’ announcement, the stringency level is set to increase:
• 15% as of January 1, 2016
• 20% as of January 1, 2017
There are four ways companies can comply:
• by making improvements to their operations;
• using Emission Performance Credit (if a facility reduces its emissions intensity to below its reduction target, it is eligible for an emission performance credit which are used to counteract the emissions of the facility);
• purchasing Alberta-based emission offset credits; and/or
• contributing to the Climate Change and Emissions Management Fund (the Fund).
The price of carbon for regulated entities choosing to pay into the Fund is also scheduled to increase:
• in 2016, $20 for every ton over a facility’s reduction target; and
• in 2017, $30 for every ton over a facility’s reduction target.
In addition to renewing and bolstering the SGER, the province appointed Professor Andrew Leach from the University of Alberta to chair an advisory panel to develop a more ambitious climate change regime in advance of COP21 in December 2015. The advisory panel has a mandate to carry out stakeholder consultations and prepare a discussion paper by the early fall which will inform the development of a new provincial climate change strategy. Indications are that the panel will undertake a comprehensive review and all options will be considered, including a carbon tax and a cap-and-trade scheme which could link with other jurisdictions such as Quebec or California. It is uncertain which aspects, if any, of Alberta’s unique emissions intensity scheme will survive the panel’s review. However, Alberta’s new NDP government seems keen to show that it is willing to commit to a higher carbon price and more stringent emission reduction targets, which will help to lend credibility to future climate change policy measures that it will be introducing in the coming months.