California to Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia and Beyond
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Transcript California to Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia and Beyond
California to Ontario, Quebec and
British Columbia and Beyond?
Can Subnational Arrangements Fill the Gap?
Professor Sharon Mascher
Faculty of Law, University of Calgary
Honorary Fellow, University of Western Australia
Outline
1. Canada’s GHG Emissions Profile
2. Canadian Federal Government’s existing Climate
Policy and Regulation
3. Sub-National and Regional Initiatives
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation
Quebec
b. Ontario
c. British Columbia)
d. Alberta
a.
5. Role of Sub-National Arrangements going forward?
1. Canada’s GHG Emissions Profile
1. Canada’s GHG Emissions Profile
1. Canada’s GHG Emissions Profile
Source: Pembina Institute Backgrounder at http://www.pembina.org/reports/kxl-climate-backgrounder-jan2013.pdf
2. Existing Federal Climate Policy and Regulation
“The Government of Canada is implementing a
sector-by-sector regulatory approach to reduce GHG
emissions that protects the environment and
supports economic prosperity.”
Focus
— Transportation (regulations relating to passenger
automobiles, light trucks, heavy vehicles)
— Renewable fuels (*current constitutional challenge)
— Electricity (Reduction of Carbon Dioxide Emissions from
Coal-Fired Generation of Electricity Regulations
(SOR/2012-167))
Missing?
2. Existing Federal Climate Policy and Regulation
Source: Pembina Institute, Top Stories from Canada’s Latest Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory
3. Sub-National and Regional Initiatives
Western Climate Initiative
— Canadian members: British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec and
Manitoba
Pacific Coast Collaborative
— Alaska, British Columbia, California, Oregon and Washington
Under 2 MOU (International)
— Canadian provincial signatories: British Columbia, Ontario,
Quebec and Northwest Territories
Pan American Action Statement
— Canadian provincial signatories: Ontario, Quebec, Nfld
North America 2050
— Canadian members: British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec and
Manitoba
1. Canada’s GHG Emissions Profile
https://www.ec.gc.ca/indicateurs-indicators/default.asp?lang=en&n=18F3BB9C-1
3. Sub-National and Regional Initiatives
Source: Pembina Institute, Top Stories from Canada’s Latest Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: Quebec
Source: Groupe de recherche sur les ressources énergétiques des bassins sédimentaires du Québec
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: Quebec
Targets:
— 6% below 1990 levels ✔
— 37.5 per cent below 1990 levels by 2030
Key Policy Initiatives:
— levy based on carbon content of fossil fuels (2006)
— cap-and-trade system
linking with California January 2014
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: Ontario
Targets:
— 15% below 1990 levels by 2020
— 37% below 1990 levels by 2030
— 80% below 1990 levels by 2050
Key Policy Initiatives:
— Complete coal phase out
“the single largest GHG reduction measure in North America”
— Green Energy and Green Economy Act (2009)
energy efficiency
Feed-in tariff for renewable energy
amended approval processes for renewable energy
April 13, 2015 – Premier announced Ontario will
introduce a cap and trade scheme
— intention to link with Quebec and California
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: Ontario
Source: Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change: Ontario’s Climate Change Discussion Paper 2015:
http://www.downloads.ene.gov.on.ca/envision/env_reg/er/documents/2015/012-3452.pdf
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: Ontario
Source: Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change: Ontario’s Climate Change Discussion Paper 2015:
http://www.downloads.ene.gov.on.ca/envision/env_reg/er/documents/2015/012-3452.pdf
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: BC
Targets:
— 6% below 2007 by 2012 ✔
— 33% below 2007 levels by 2020
— 80% below 2007 levels by 2050
Key Policy Initiatives:
— Revenue neutral carbon tax
— carbon neutral government
— Clean Energy Act
requires that at least 93% of the province’s electricity be generated by
clean, renewable sources
o BC Hydro’s generation portfolio currently exceeds 96% clean or
renewable resources
Requires, by 2020, that at least 66% of BC Hydro’s future incremental
power demand must be met through conservation and efficiency
improvements
— Commitment to “cleanest” LNG facilities in the world
— Forests offsets protocol
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: BC
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: BC
Source: BC Government Greenhouse Gas Inventory 2012
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: Alberta
Targets: **new government and awaiting new climate policy!!!
— Reduce emissions by 20 megatonnes by 2010
— Reduce emissions by 50 megatonnes by 2020
— Reduce emissions by 200 megatonnes by 2050
Result in “50 per cent below business as usual level and 14% below 2005 levels while
maintaining economic growth”
Key Policy Initiative:
Specified Gas Emitters Regulation 2007
— baseline and credit, emission intensity approach
— industrial facilities that emit over 100,000 tonnes of GHGs per year are required to reduce
emission intensity by 12% (15% by January 1, 2016; 20% by January 1, 2017) relative to
baseline established using 2003-2005 average emissions
— compliance measures15%
Reduce emission intensity
Use previously generated emission performance credits (from facilities that reduce intensity
beyond target)
Purchase emissions offsets
Payment into a technology fund at a rate of $15/tC02 ($20/tC02 for 2016 and $30/tC02 for
2017).
Cost of intensity improvements and offsets effectively
Current Climate Leadership discussion – pre-Paris announcement?
4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: Alberta
Share of Industrial GHG Emissions by Major Sector in Alberta
Source: Pembina Institute, Power to Change: How Alberta Can Green its Grid and Embrace Clean Energy
http://www.pembina.org/reports/power-to-change-pembina-cec-2014.pdf
5. Role of Sub-National Arrangements Going forward?
New Canadian Federal Government policy
— “We will ensure that the provinces and territories have
adequate tools to design their own policies to meet these
commitments, including their own carbon pricing policies.”
What role for sub-national arrangements to support
forward momentum??
— As linkages build, might other provinces (AB) be
encouraged to join?
— Or, as linkages build, a variation of carbon clubs (al la
William Nordhaus) form to punish those who don’t join?
Thank you / Merci