
What does suspending Alberta’s clean electricity regulations mean for Canada’s climate goals?
CBC
Ottawa’s clean electricity regulations' days are numbered in Alberta, after Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith signed their memorandum of understanding last week.
The federal government suspended the regulations meant to rein in Canada’s worst polluter, but it hasn’t explained how it is going to ensure the country’s climate goals will be met.
Carbon pricing, though, is expected to play a dominant role.
The federal electricity regulations were supposed to have the biggest impact in Alberta, displacing nearly 214 million tonnes of pollution. That’s equivalent to removing the tailpipe emissions from more than 49 million cars.
Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin says she has the power to negotiate a side deal with Alberta that achieves similar outcomes.
“If they can show me that they can meet the objectives of the regulation with their own regional path, I can negotiate with them,” Dabrusin told CBC’s Rosemary Barton Live.
The technical term to describe what Dabrusin is talking about is an equivalency agreement, although neither the minister nor Albertan officials have used that term. The Canadian Environmental Protection Act authorizes Dabrusin to enter into such deals with provinces, territories and Indigenous governments.
Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, British Columbia and Alberta have all signed such agreements with the federal government.
Thursday’s agreement commits Alberta to “achieving a net-zero power grid by 2050,” the goal also outlined in the clean electricity regulations.
Alberta argued those rules would force the province to phase out natural gas power generation and plunge it into blackouts.
The regulations do not ban natural gas power, but do require facilities to build out carbon capture and storage and purchase carbon credits to offset emissions.
A spokesperson for Alberta's minister of the environment and protected areas said the province will hit its emissions targets through its carbon pricing system, the Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction (TIER) program, which already regulates heavy electricity generation emitters.
The memorandum signed with Ottawa requires Alberta to negotiate an agreement by April 1 to raise the price of carbon credits traded in the TIER system.
However, for years, officials at Environment and Climate Change Canada studied whether a strong enough price on emissions alone would be enough to put the country on track to achieve its climate targets.













