Canada’sโค new federal budget proposes a pathway toโ potentially eliminate oil and gas emissions, aโข move that couldโฃ dramatically reshape the country’s energy sector and its climate change strategy. Theโ budget, released Tuesday, outlines plans for a cap on emissions from the oil and gas industry, wiht the possibility of achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.
The proposed cap aims to accelerate Canada’s progress towards itsโ climate goals under theโ Paris Agreement, impacting major oil and gas producers and potentially influencing investment decisions in the sector.While detailsโ remain to be finalized, the plan envisions a system where companies can trade credits for emissions reductions,โ or pay into โคaโฃ fund for projects that lowerโ emissions elsewhere. The initiative is expected to face scrutiny from industry groups and provincial governments, especiallyโ those heavily reliant on oil and gas revenues.
The budget document states the government will work with provinces,โ Indigenous groups, and industry to develop the emissions cap regulations by โthe end of 2024.โ It also allocates funding for carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) technologies, seen as crucial for reducingโค emissions from theโฃ oil and gas sector.
“This is a notable step towards demonstrating global climate โฃleadership,” โsaid Environment and Climate โchange Canada in a statementโ accompanyingโ the budget release. “We are committed to working collaboratively โto ensure aโฃ just transition for workers and communities.”
Canada’s oil and gas sector is currently the country’s largest source of greenhouse gas emissions, accounting for 26% โขof total โemissions in 2021, according to Environment and โฃClimate Change Canada. The sector’s emissions have historically proven challengingโฃ to reduce, prompting calls for more aggressive policy โฃinterventions. โค
The budget also includes provisions for a taxโฃ credit for investments in CCUS projects, aiming to incentivize companies to adopt technologies that capture carbon dioxide emissions from industrial sources and either store them underground or โuse them โฃin other products. the governmentโ estimates these measures will contribute substantially toโ Canada’s โฃgoal โฃof reducingโค emissions by 40-45% below 2005 levels by โ2030.