Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds to revisit future of oil and gas aid fund

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2021 03:27 PM
  • Feds to revisit future of oil and gas aid fund

OTTAWA - Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said Friday a pandemic aid program to help oil and gas companies cut their methane emissions will be revisited now that the industry is back on its feet.

But he said the government is not going to consider aid programs that help the fossil fuel sector cut their emissions to be the "inefficient fossil fuel subsidies" the government has promised to eliminate by the end of 2023.

The Onshore Emissions Reduction Fund is under an unflattering spotlight this week after an audit found it to be poorly designed and not good value for money.

Environment Commissioner Jerry DeMarco's report released Thursday criticized the program for poor design, overstating the emissions cuts it could achieve, and possibly double-counting emissions that would have been cut without this fund. He also said the program was helping some companies increase their production without accounting for the increase in emissions that would bring.

With only about one-fifth of the program's $675-million total already awarded, and the third round of applications not closing until January, DeMarco said there is still time to fix the multiple ways this program is failing.

In Ottawa Friday Wilkinson said the program was conceived 20 months ago to help oil and gas companies stay afloat at a time when oil prices had tanked.

"What I would say, and I agree with the commissioner on this is, we’re not in the same situation now," Wilkinson said.

"The economic crisis for the oil sector has passed and now it’s time to actually look at whether this program should continue in its current form."

In the first weeks of the pandemic, oil prices in Canada took a double whammy hit of plummeting demand as the world came to a stand still, and a production war between Russia and Saudi Arabia that caused a glut in oil supplies.

At certain points the benchmark price for Alberta oil was less than zero. But prices have rebounded, now sitting somewhere north of US$50 a barrel.

Julia Levin, a senior program manager for climate and energy at Environmental Defence, said the crisis period for the industry was very short-lived, and the projects to cut methane are required work under new federal methane regulations that are in the midst of being implemented.

"There is no evidence that public dollars were needed to help these so-called struggling companies take on spending that they should be doing on their own," she said.

DeMarco said it's not clear how many of the projects would have gone ahead without the ERF funding since companies were already required to do the work to meet the new methane regulations. As such he said it's not clear how many additional emissions cuts this program has achieved.

Wilkinson however said that 4.6 million tonnes of emissions were already avoided strictly as a result of the program. Therefore he said it does not qualify as the kind of fossil fuel subsidy the government has promised to eliminate by the end of 2023.

However DeMarco's audit found 27 of the first 40 projects funded also included in the application a claim that the companies would be increasing their production as a result of the program, largely because the technology it was funding to cut emissions meant they could produce more oil and gas and still meet the new methane regulations.

Wilkinson said the government only sees as problematic financial aid to fossil fuel companies that incentivizes "the exploration and the production of fossil fuels."

"Let me be clear, though," he added. "What (fossil fuel subsidy) does not mean is investments that the government may make alongside energy sector partners to reduce emissions. So things like carbon cap and sequestration are not inefficient fossil fuel subsidies."

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver penthouse party host back in jail

Vancouver penthouse party host back in jail
Investigators discovered that Mohammed Movassaghi, 43, was running an illegal booze can and show lounge inside his 1,100-square-foot penthouse, packing it with hundreds of people, and violating Covid-19 health orders.

Vancouver penthouse party host back in jail

B.C. fruit and vegetable growers face uncertainty

B.C. fruit and vegetable growers face uncertainty
Sandhu's family came to Canada in the early 1960s and began farming about a decade later. Today, the 27-year-old and his parents grow a variety of berries and vegetables across about 120 hectares, while several other relatives have farms nearby in the Abbotsford area.

B.C. fruit and vegetable growers face uncertainty

New COVID-19 variant sparks border concerns

New COVID-19 variant sparks border concerns
Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole has called for the government to immediately strengthen border screening in the face of a highly mutated new variant of COVID-19. The World Health Organization will meet Friday to discuss variant B.1.1.529, which originated in South Africa.

New COVID-19 variant sparks border concerns

B.C. braces for more rain as PM to see flood zone

B.C. braces for more rain as PM to see flood zone
Rainstorms of increasing intensity are forecast to hit British Columbia over the coming days, prompting warnings for people to be prepared to evacuate. Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said the biggest storm is expected to arrive Tuesday and people living in areas prone to flooding should be on alert.

B.C. braces for more rain as PM to see flood zone

Human remains in two separate investigations identified

Human remains in two separate investigations identified
The two investigations are not connected and criminality is not believed to be a factor in either death. Both investigations have been turned over to BC Coroners Service. The families of the deceased men have been notified.

Human remains in two separate investigations identified

Extension granted for money laundering report

Extension granted for money laundering report
An inquiry commission has received a six-month extension to file its final report into money laundering in British Columbia. A statement from the Commission of Inquiry into Money Laundering in B.C. says the provincial government has approved a deadline extension to May 20 from Dec. 15.

Extension granted for money laundering report