Alberta Releases Details of Climate Leadership Plan in Advance of Federal/Provincial Climate Change Meeting and COP 21

In advance of a meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and fellow premiers, Alberta Premier Rachel Notley unveiled the details of the province’s Climate Leadership Plan on November 22, 2015. The plan, which is based on the advice of the Climate Change Advisory Panel (the Panel, led by Dr. Andrew Leach), will also be promoted by Premier Notley at the United Nations Climate Change conference that will take place in Paris from November 30 to December 11, 2015.

Alberta’s Climate Leadership Plan accelerates the province’s transition from coal to renewable electricity sources and sets an emissions limits of 100 megatonnes for the oil sands with provisions for new upgrading and co-generation (the level of current emissions from the oil sands is approximately 70 megatonnes). To ensure that the policy is progressive and protects the competitiveness of Alberta’s core industries, the Panel has recommended a consumer credit which will offset the impact of the policy for households and allocations of emissions credits for industrial emitters. A copy of the Panel’s Report to the Minister, which was also released on November 22nd, is available Leadership Report Online.
Alberta’s Climate Leadership Plan sets out the following policy objectives:

Carbon Pricing
Carbon pricing provides the backbone of the Panel’s proposed policy architecture. Alberta will phase in carbon pricing in two steps:
o $20/tonne economy-wide in January 2017.
o $30/tonne economy-wide in January 2018.

The Panel has also proposed that the existing Specified Gas Emitters Regulation be replaced by a Carbon Competitiveness Regulation in 2018, which would:
a) broaden the carbon pricing signal in Alberta to cover approximately 90% of the province’s emissions, up from less than 50% today;
b) provide a consumer rebate to mitigate the impacts of carbon pricing on low- and middle-income Albertans, fund complementary emissions-abatement programs and, where applicable, support a sound and just transition for labour and communities and strategies to protect small- and medium-sized businesses;
c) improve the mechanism by which trade-exposed industries are protected to ensure their competitiveness while encouraging and rewarding top performance;
d) increase stringency at the same pace as peer and competing jurisdictions; and
e) avoid the transfer of wealth outside of Alberta.

Electricity and Renewables
• Alberta will phase out all pollution created by burning coal and transition to more renewable energy and natural gas generation by 2030.
• Three principles will shape the coal phase-out: (i) maintaining reliability; (ii) providing reasonable stability in prices to consumers and business; and (iii) ensuring that capital is not unnecessarily stranded.
• Two-thirds of coal-generated electricity will be replaced by renewables – primarily wind power – while natural gas generation will continue to provide firm base load reliability.
• Renewable energy sources will comprise up to 30 per cent of Alberta’s electricity production by 2030.

Methane Reduction
• In collaboration with industry, environmental organizations, and affected First Nations, Alberta will implement a methane reduction strategy to reduce emissions by 45% from 2014 levels by 2025.

Revenue Neutral
• One-hundred per cent of proceeds from carbon pricing will be reinvested in Alberta.
• A portion of collected revenues will be invested directly into measures to reduce pollution (including clean energy research and technology), green infrastructure (such as public transit), and programs to help Albertans reduce their energy use.
• Other revenues will be invested in an adjustment fund that will help individuals and families make ends meet; provide transition support to small businesses, First Nations, and people working in affected coal facilities.

Alberta’s Climate Leadership Plan is expected to reduce emissions from current trends by approximately 20 Mt by 2020, and approximately 50 Mt by 2030. This would roughly stabilize emissions, by 2030, just above current levels at approximately 270 Mt.

Moving the Discussion Forward: Alberta Environment & Parks releases Climate Change Discussion Document

On August 14, 2015, the Alberta government released a Climate Leadership Discussion Document (Discussion Document) to lay the foundation for ongoing consultations with Albertans on climate change policy. The Discussion Document sets out the challenges the province faces, presents considerations and options for action, and offers questions to spur debate and discussion for stakeholders and members of the public. The Discussion Document is a follow up to the Alberta government’s June 2015 announcement that it was taking steps to achieve real, demonstrable reductions in the province’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by tightening the requirements under the Specified Gas Emitters Regulation and appointing an advisory panel to undertake a comprehensive review of Alberta’s climate change policy.
The Discussion Document sets out the province’s new approach to climate change to:
• serve as an important commitment to protect the health of Albertans and our ecosystem;
• make a significant and meaningful contribution to Canada’s greenhouse gas reduction commitments and the global effort to mitigate climate change;
• ensure the continued strength and competitiveness of the province’s economy in a lower carbon world;
• advance innovation, encourage adoption of new technologies and support more renewable and cleaner sources of energy and conservation;
• acknowledge the interactions and coordinate with other related policy initiatives, including the royalty review, land-use plans, infrastructure planning and investment;
• provide open and transparent monitoring and regular reporting to Albertans on progress toward emissions reductions;
• foster partnerships with municipalities, provinces, territories, the federal government and First Nations and Métis communities; and
• ensure Albertans are engaged and part of the solution.
Following the review process, Alberta’s climate change advisory panel will provide its recommendations and advice to the Minister of Environment and Parks in fall 2015. Stakeholders and members of the public are encouraged to engage in public meetings and taking the online survey.

 

Alberta’s Carbon Price to Increase as the Province Moves Toward Climate Change Policy Renewal

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.