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Budget plan: Canada could remove oil and gas emission cap

The government revealed in its budget plan for the first budget of Prime Minister Mark Carney that Canada may scrap the cap on oil-and-gas emissions and replace it with other measures, such as industrial carbon pricing or the deployment of technology to capture and store carbon. In the climate plan that was part of the first budget of Prime Minister Mark Carney, it said the cap would be no longer needed because its value would be marginal. The Canada's emission cap is not being enforced by legislation, and it will not take effect before 2030. Canadian oil and natural gas companies have condemned it, claiming that this would lead to a reduction in production. Carney has been criticized for renouncing the Liberals' environmental focus. He has focused on trade wars between Canada and the U.S. In the budget, it was also announced that the government would amend greenwashing laws which had caused investment uncertainty. The legislation was passed during the former Trudeau government's tenure last year. Oil companies had criticized it.

"PAN-CANADIAN AGREEMENT"

The Carney government has said that it is committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and will work with the provincial governments to improve Canada's industrial carbon pricing system.

In the budget, it is stated that a "pan Canadian agreement" on carbon pricing would help to increase investor confidence. The government will also apply the federal industrial price of carbon dioxide (CO2) to emitters from any province whose efforts at carbon-pricing do not meet federal standards.

Alberta, a province that produces oil and natural gas, has, for instance, frozen its industrial carbon price, while Saskatchewan does not currently have one.

Mike Holden is the chief economist of the Business Council of Alberta. The council's members include Canada's biggest energy companies.

He said that the industry had "universally condemned" the cap on emissions.

Holden stated that "if you have to choose between this and a stronger industrial carbon price I would prefer the latter."

Analysts say that large-scale corporate investment in decarbonization, such as the C$16 billion ($11.47billion) carbon capture project proposed by Pathways Alliance, Canada's six biggest oil sands firms -- does not make financial sense without a price for emissions.

The budget refers to the Pathways Project as "potentially transformational" for the country and extends the existing investment tax credit available for carbon capture project by five years.

(source: Reuters)