Reaction to the Alberta-Ottawa agreement on carbon pricing, pipeline plans


CALGARY — Shovels could hit the ground on a new West Coast oilsands pipeline as early as September 2027, the federal and Alberta governments said Friday, after they announced a plan to gradually increase the province’s effective industrial carbon price to at least $130 a tonne by 2040.

That means an agreement on the Pathways carbon capture project is the last outstanding item to nail down from the energy accord both governments signed in November.

Here’s some reaction to the latest federal-provincial agreement:

“We are building a Canada that works with a more prosperous, sustainable and resilient economy for all.” — Prime Minister Mark Carney

“This gives industry the time and certainty needed to plan, invest and deliver real emissions-reducing projects without undermining competitiveness. It means that we’re much closer to attaining our joint ambition to make Canada into a global energy leader and a trusted supplier of responsibly produced lower-emissions energy in the world.” — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith

“Conservatives want a pipeline without a carbon tax, not a carbon tax without a pipeline.” — federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre

“As a country, it’s time to stop rewarding bad behaviour. It cannot be the case that the projects that get prioritized in Canada are those where a premier threatens to leave the country.” — British Columbia Premier David Eby

“This announcement marks the Carney government’s official surrender to the oil and gas lobby. By gutting carbon pricing to the point of irrelevance, it has dismantled the last federal climate measure standing. We now have a federal government that no longer even pretends to rein in big corporate polluters.” — federal NDP Leader Avi Lewis

“Alberta now has some forward movement in building Canada’s energy future. This is good news, and necessary. But now Danielle Smith has to get to work, in an increasingly difficult environment of her own creation.” — Alberta NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi

“Today’s historic agreement between the government of Canada and the government of Alberta puts politics aside for progress. When we feud within the federation, we send the message that investors should pursue business opportunities elsewhere. When we unite, we invite investment back.” Canadian Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Candace Laing

“Today’s implementation agreement between the governments of Canada and Alberta is an important and welcome step toward unleashing Canada’s full energy potential.” — Business Council of Canada president and CEO Goldy Hyder.



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