WCI issues Second Harmonization Package for GHG Reporting Requirements for Canadian Jurisdictions for Consultation

The Western Climate Initiative (WCI) issued for stakeholder review a second harmonization package for reporting requirements for Canadian jurisdictions.

On October 29, 2010, the Western Climate Initiative (WCI) issued for stakeholder review a second harmonization package for reporting requirements for Canadian jurisdictions that builds upon the previously released Harmonization of Essential Requirements for Mandatory Reporting in Canadian Jurisdictions with the WCI Essential Requirements for Mandatory Reporting and the EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program (which contains the WCI’s proposal for harmonizing the existing WCI Essential Requirements for Mandatory Reporting for use in Canadian jurisdictions). Comments on the second harmonization package are due by November 24, 2010.

The second harmonization package contains the WCI’s proposal for new quantification methods for five remaining sources: magnesium production, electronics manufacturing, underground coal mining, petroleum and natural gas systems, and natural gas transmission and distribution.  The proposed WCI essential requirements are consistent with those of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, but are appropriate for use in the Canadian jurisdictions.  It is expected that WCI jurisdictions in Canada will implement the harmonized essential requirements through their reporting regulations.

The second harmonization package is available online link.

WCI Proposes Harmonised Reporting Requirements for Canadian WCI Members

On September 8, 2010, the Western Climate Initiative (WCI) released its proposal for revising and harmonising the existing Final Essential Requirements for Mandatory Reporting (the Essential Requirements) for use in Canadian jurisdictions.

On September 8, 2010, the Western Climate Initiative (WCI) released its proposal for revising and harmonising the existing Final Essential Requirements for Mandatory Reporting (the Essential Requirements) for use in Canadian jurisdictions. The proposal is entitled Harmonisation of Essential Requirements for Mandatory Reporting in Canadian Jurisdictions with the WCI Essential Requirements for Mandatory Reporting and the EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program (the Harmonisation Document).

By way of background, on July 16, 2009, the WCI published the Essential Requirements for implementation by WCI Partner jurisdictions. On September 22, 2009, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) adopted its final Mandatory Reporting Rule (the EPA Rule) for greenhouse gas emissions. On May 28, 2010, the WCI invited stakeholder comment on its proposal to harmonise the Essential Requirements with the EPA Rule for use in a cap-and-trade program.  In order to maintain consistency across all WCI jurisdictions, WCI members acknowledged that the WCI proposal to harmonise with the EPA Rule necessitated the development of revised Essential Requirements for use in Canadian provinces to ensure harmonised quantification methods throughout the U.S. and Canadian WCI jurisdictions.  As a result, WCI members directed the WCI Reporting Committee to develop amended Canadian Essential Requirements that are themselves harmonised with the proposed WCI Essential Requirements for use in U.S. jurisdictions.

The following principles were applied in the harmonisation process:

1. A Canadian facility should apply the same functions, equations, sampling protocols and measurement criteria as U.S. facilities subject to the U.S. version of the harmonised Essential Requirements. This means that the harmonised Essential Requirements will achieve the same level of reporting accuracy for Canadian and U.S. facilities, but the U.S. version may require more data elements to be reported to harmonize with the EPA Rule.

2. The quantification methods included in the harmonised Essential Requirements must remain sufficiently reliable and accurate to be employed in a greenhouse gas (GHG) cap-and-trade program.

3.The WCI reporting system must remain suitable for use in Canadian jurisdictions. For example, it must allow reporting in metric as well as English units and must, where necessary, include Canada-specific emission factors.

4. The harmonised Essential Requirements should facilitate harmonisation with Canadian federal reporting. Some Canadian jurisdictions are working with Environment Canada to develop a one-window reporting tool for provincial and national GHG reporting requirements.

The WCI anticipates that Canadian WCI members will implement the harmonised Essential Requirements by adopting them into or through their reporting regulations.  The WCI is also working on minor revisions to the general provisions of the Essential Requirements and the development of quantification methods for upstream oil and gas, natural gas transmission, distribution and storage, underground coal mine and magnesium production that are appropriate for use in Canadian member jurisdictions.

A stakeholder call to discuss the proposal will be hosted by the WCI during the week of September 20th. The Harmonisation Document is available through the WCI web site.

WCI

WCI is the acronym widely used to refer to the “Western Climate Initiative”.

The Western Climate Initiative is a joint collaborating of the US States Arizona, California, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and the Canadian Provinces British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec to take cooperative actions to address climate change and implement a joint strategy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Website: www.westernclimateinitiative.org