Alberta Pledges Constitutional Showdown Over Emissions Cap

Premier Danielle Smith declared sheโ€™s pursuing โ€˜every legal optionโ€™ in her fight against Trudeauโ€™s federal proposal to curb emissions.
emily-and-taylor-101
on
Premier Danielle Smith at the United Conservative Party AGM in Red Deer earlier this month.
Premier Danielle Smith at the United Conservative Party AGM in Red Deer earlier this month. Credit: Danielle Smith / YouTube

Just days after Albertaโ€™s ruling United Conservative Party voted to abandon its net zero goals and recognize carbon dioxide as an โ€œessential nutrientโ€ supporting life on Earth, Premier Danielle Smith threatened a legal fight or constitutional challenge to new federal emissions cap regulations.

Following through on an announcement made late last year, on November 4, Prime Minister Justin Trudeauโ€™s government has released draft regulations aimed at capping greenhouse gas emissions from the oil and gas sector. Canadian environmental organizations welcomed the news, by and large calling it a much needed cap on pollution

The draft regulations, which are now proceeding through their public consultation phase, aim to cap greenhouse gas emissions from the oil and gas sector at 35 percent below 2019 levels by 2030. This proposal was on the low end of emissions caps that were considered. Reuters reported that unless Canadaโ€™s oil and gas sector intensifies efforts to decarbonize, Canada will miss its target of reducing emissions to 40-45 percent below 2005 levels by 2030. Canadian environmental organizations like Environmental Defence noted that while the draft regulations are encouraging, they need to be strengthened in order to be effective.

โ€œThe rules must take effect sooner than the proposed 2030 timeline, and align with Canadaโ€™s climate goal of a 40-45 percent emissions reduction by 2030,โ€ said Aly Hyder Ali, Environmental Defenceโ€™s oil and gas program manager, in a statement. 

โ€œLoopholes which allow companies to avoid having to reduce their own pollution, like offsets and a decarbonization fund, must also be closed.โ€

At a press conference held shortly after the draft regulations became public, Danielle Smith at some points indicated she felt surprised or was caught off guard by the proposal, while at other times indicated she knew it was coming and her government was preparing for it. In response to a question about her governmentโ€™s negotiations with the federal government over the Pathways Alliance carbon capture project, Smith said: โ€œHow are you supposed to participate in good faith with a partner who hammers you over the head when your back is turned? That’s how we feel today. We’ve been sitting with them having regular bilateral meetings throughout the course of the last year and a half as I committed to doing. And every single time (Federal Environment Minister) Steven Guilbeault, comes out, he comes up with a bludgeon. And so how are we supposed to have some meaningful conversations to work together on a shared purpose? I think heโ€™s destroyed the trust.โ€

Martin Z. Olszynski, chair in energy, resources and sustainability at the University of Calgaryโ€™s Faculty of Law, doesnโ€™t buy the premierโ€™s take.

โ€œItโ€™s hard to square that with her public messaging for the past couple of weeks that they suspected Minister Guilbeault would announce something during COP,โ€ said Olszynski in an interview with DeSmog. โ€œMoreover, itโ€™s not like the idea of an oil and gas emissions cap is new โ€” it was part of the (federal) Liberal Partyโ€™s campaign last election (in 2021).โ€

Emissions vs. Production

The Trudeau government announced they were working on a proposed emissions cap in December 2023. As previously reported by DeSmog, that announcement was met with a flurry of condemnation by pro-oil libertarian Canadian think tanks affiliated with the Atlas Network.

At the press conference, Smith characterized the federal proposal as a โ€œproduction capโ€ that would necessitate cutting oil production by an estimated one million barrels per day.

โ€œIt is not an emissions cap. It is a production cap,โ€ said the premier, visibly angry. โ€œThis cap violates Canada’s constitution. Section 92-A clearly gives provinces exclusive jurisdiction over nonrenewable natural resource development.โ€

Despite Smithโ€™s rhetoric, the federal emissions cap proposal does not specify cuts to production as a means of achieving the goal. Instead, the regulations propose a cap and trade system intended to recognize companies that successfully reduce emissions while incentivizing producers to clean their production methods. Minister Guilbeault has said the government wants to motivate producers to invest their considerable annual profits โ€” estimated at $66.6 billion ($47.95 billion) in 2022 โ€” into decarbonization.

Ironically, though most Canadian environmental organizations would prefer the federal government come up with oil and gas production caps โ€” if not a planned phase out of fossil fuels altogether โ€” the federal governmentโ€™s proposed emissions cap falls far short of whatโ€™s considered necessary to meet international obligations and blunt the effects of global warming. 

Climate Action Network Canada notes that the proposed compliance period doesnโ€™t even begin until 2030, and that there arenโ€™t sufficient protections for oil and gas sector workers who would require retraining. There are legitimate concerns, such as those listed by the David Suzuki Foundation, that loopholes remain in place that will allow oil and gas companies a chance to buy their way out or delay action until 2030.

In her attack on the proposed emissions cap, Smith argued widely, saying it would impact everything from the provinceโ€™s financial wellbeing to the national economy, from the average monthly income of Canadian households, to international energy security.

โ€œWe will also continue to defend the livelihoods of the estimated 150,000 workers nationwide who will lose their jobs as a result of this cap,โ€ said Smith. 

โ€œWe will continue to defend the families all across this country who will be left with $419 per month less to be able to pay for groceries and mortgage payments and utilities. We will continue to defend Albertans and Canadians who rely on revenues from oil and gas to pay for the public services that they desperately need, including health care, education law, justice services, roads and bridges.โ€

War Room Stats

Smithโ€™s statistics appear to be pulled from the provinceโ€™s Canadian Energy Centre โ€” also called the energy war room โ€” and โ€˜Scrap the Capโ€™ propaganda campaign. DeSmog reached out to the premierโ€™s office but did not receive an immediate response. Some of the assertions donโ€™t add up. For instance, Canadaโ€™s oil and gas sector is estimated to employ 150,000 people in total, so the proposed emissions cap is unlikely to result in an end to all employment in the sector, particularly given that Canadian government policy aims to keep production going despite the appeals of environmentalists. Where exactly the $419 per month in lost household income figure comes from isnโ€™t clear, though it has featured in the provinceโ€™s โ€˜Scrap the Capโ€™ propaganda campaign. On the matter of public services ostensibly dependent on oil and gas revenues, it is chiefly the government of Alberta that pays for such services with royalties from the oil and gas sector, a policy that has been duly criticized both because it has kept provincial incomes taxes untenably low, and because doing so has robbed the province of long-term wealth from its fossil fuel resources. Smith and other Alberta conservatives have long argued Albertaโ€™s oil economy supports social spending in other provinces through equalization payments, but this is in fact false and has been debunked countless times

Smith concluded by saying sheโ€™s prepared to make a federal case out of the issue.

โ€œAlbertans and all Canadians can rely on our government to actively explore the use of every legal option, including a constitutional challenge and the use of the Alberta Sovereignty within a United Canada Act,โ€ said Smith in closing her press conference. 

โ€œWe will not stand idly by while Justin Trudeau sacrifices our prosperity, our Constitution, and our quality of life for his extreme agenda.โ€

Writing in the Globe and Mail, West Coast Environmental Law Association lawyers Anna Johnston and Andrew Gage objected to arguments that the emissions cap was neither necessary nor constitutional. They noted that Alberta and Saskatchewan account for nearly half of Canadaโ€™s total annual GHG emissions, that the oil and gas sector represents more than 30 percent of Canadaโ€™s annual domestic emissions, and that industry commitments to voluntarily curb emissions made three decades ago amounted to less than nothing, given a 40 percent increase in emissions during that time. With this in mind, Johnson and Gage remind that Canadaโ€™s Supreme Court had already determined the federal carbon tax is constitutionally sound, given global warming is an existential threat to all humanity, irrespective of provincial or regional borders.

Olszynski said Alberta may attempt to challenge the matter on constitutional grounds, but similarly doubts theyโ€™ll succeed.

โ€œIn my view, the feds have a strong argument that these regulations are a valid exercise of their legislative authority to make laws in relation to the โ€˜criminal lawโ€™, which has long since been broadly construed as extending beyond the conventional criminal law to matters such as food and drug safety, tobacco advertising, and environmental harm.โ€

Whether a premier who oversaw a party convention that removed carbon dioxideโ€™s designation as a pollutant is in any position to be challenging federal emissions regulations is a critical point for Olszynski.

โ€œThat the premier was not prepared to challenge this and other disinformation within her own party tells you everything you need to know about her sincerity.โ€

Olszynski says Smith goes out of her way to avoid acknowledging the reality of climate change. โ€œInstead, she sidesteps the question by stating that she supports the industry in itsย statedย goals to achieve net zero. As we know, however, industry is good at talking about emissions reductions, but persistently resistant to actually achieving them.โ€

emily-and-taylor-101
Taylor C. Noakes is an independent journalist and public historian.

Related Posts

on

The Climate Policy Institute attending the UN summit was founded by a state-backed think tank which has received fossil fuel funding.

The Climate Policy Institute attending the UN summit was founded by a state-backed think tank which has received fossil fuel funding.
on

With fracking CEO Wright tapped to serve in Trumpโ€™s cabinet, Lomborgโ€™s influence could extend into the highest levels of the U.S. government.

With fracking CEO Wright tapped to serve in Trumpโ€™s cabinet, Lomborgโ€™s influence could extend into the highest levels of the U.S. government.
on

Melinda Janki wants to protect her home country of Guyana from the harms caused by Big Oil.

Melinda Janki wants to protect her home country of Guyana from the harms caused by Big Oil.
on

Companies with major oil and gas interests have been given a stage at the UK pavilion in Baku.

Companies with major oil and gas interests have been given a stage at the UK pavilion in Baku.