Oilsands emissions on track to outpace reductions from Pathways project: economist


Suncor’s base plant with upgraders in the oilsands in Fort McMurray Alta, on Monday June 13, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson – The Canadian Press

CALGARY — The oilsands sector is on track for a big increase in greenhouse gas emissions, even with the Pathways carbon storage project moving forward, an environmental economist says.

Emissions from the increased production that a new West Coast pipeline would enable far eclipse what Pathways would prevent from entering the atmosphere, said Dave Sawyer, with the Canadian Climate Institute.

The think tank has estimated an average of 20 megatonnes a year in new emissions from the oilsands sector would come with the planned new pipeline capacity. The Pathways Project envisions storing six megatonnes a year underground starting in 2035. It aims at another 10-megatonne reduction by 2045, either through carbon capture and storage or other technologies.

An earlier iteration had a goal of storing 22 megatonnes a year by 2030.

“We could see a fairly significant increase in emissions,” Sawyer said, adding changes to Alberta’s carbon pricing system announced earlier this year “didn’t materially fix the market” in a way that would motivate industry to invest in emissions reduction.

Oilsands and thermal heavy oil production contributed 92 million tonnes of CO2 emissions in 2024, according to the federal government’s latest national inventory report released this year.

In October, the Pembina Institute think tank published a report calculating Canada’s emissions trajectory under three scenarios: current measures, current measures with Pathways and a “Grand Bargain” with both Pathways and the new pipeline going ahead.

The third scenario was found to have the highest absolute oilsands emissions — 89 megatonnes annually by 2035. That’s 19 per cent higher than the “current measures with Pathways” scenario.

That study was done before Pathways’ targets were scaled back. Janetta McKenzie, director of the oil and gas program at the Pembina Institute, said the group is crunching new numbers now.

“Bottom line, we’re likely to see oilsands emissions continue to rise over the next five, 10, 15, 20 years,” she said.

“Nothing that’s been announced … suggests that there’s a real attempt to constrain oilsands emissions and see them reduce over time.”

The Alberta and federal governments signed a sweeping energy accord late last year that, among other things, set out conditions for a new West Coast oil pipeline to move ahead. They agreed the pipeline would be conditional on Pathways being built, and vice versa.

Earlier this month, the province submitted its proposal for its pipeline to the federal major project office, which aims to speed along infrastructure projects deemed in Canada’s national interest. The same day, the governments signed a non-binding agreement with the companies behind Pathways.



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