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California to Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia and Beyond? Can Subnational Arrangements Fill the Gap? Professor Sharon Mascher Faculty of Law, University.

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Presentation on theme: "California to Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia and Beyond? Can Subnational Arrangements Fill the Gap? Professor Sharon Mascher Faculty of Law, University."— Presentation transcript:

1 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

2 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 a. Quebec b. Ontario c. British Columbia) d. Alberta 5.Role of Sub-National Arrangements going forward?

3 1. Canada’s GHG Emissions Profile

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5 Source: Pembina Institute Backgrounder at http://www.pembina.org/reports/kxl-climate-backgrounder-jan2013.pdf 1. Canada’s GHG Emissions Profile

6 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?

7 2. Existing Federal Climate Policy and Regulation Source: Pembina Institute, Top Stories from Canada’s Latest Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory

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9 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

10 1. Canada’s GHG Emissions Profile https://www.ec.gc.ca/indicateurs-indicators/default.asp?lang=en&n=18F3BB9C-1

11 3. Sub-National and Regional Initiatives Source: Pembina Institute, Top Stories from Canada’s Latest Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory

12 4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: Quebec Source: Groupe de recherche sur les ressources énergétiques des bassins sédimentaires du Québec

13 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

14 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

15 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

16 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

17 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

18 4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: BC

19 Source: BC Government Greenhouse Gas Inventory 2012

20 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/tC0 2 ($20/tC0 2 for 2016 and $30/tC0 2 for 2017).  Cost of intensity improvements and offsets effectively  Current Climate Leadership discussion – pre-Paris announcement?

21 4. Provincial Climate Policy and Regulation: 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 http://www.pembina.org/reports/power-to-change-pembina-cec-2014.pdf Share of Industrial GHG Emissions by Major Sector in Alberta

22 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?

23 Thank you / Merci


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