Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I am senior counsel at Borden Ladner Gervais, having returned to the private sector after serving as minister of energy and minister of environment for the Province of Alberta.
In 2023, I released Alberta's emissions reduction and energy development plan, which was a plan to cut emissions to net zero by 2050 without compromising affordable, reliable and secure energy. Since leaving government, I now spend a significant amount of my time working with and advising companies that are pursuing projects in the clean energy space.
Let me state at the outset that the science is clear that global temperatures are rising and urgent action is needed to reduce emissions. However, urgency cannot simply ignore feasibility. Any climate road map needs to be achievable. It serves no purpose to pick rigid, inflexible targets that cannot be reached.
Canada has a long history of missing targets and we're not on track to meet 2030. This is unfortunate, but it's also not a surprise. To be successful, there needs to be collaboration and that has been missing. Over the past decade, Ottawa has ignored advice from industry and has trampled provincial jurisdiction.
Fortunately, there are signs of a more pragmatic approach. I was encouraged to hear Prime Minister Carney say that a new climate competitiveness strategy will “focus on results over objectives”. If this means that both the climate and the economy are important, then maybe the economic decline we've seen can be curbed.
A new climate competitiveness strategy could also better align provincial and federal climate plans and focus on areas that are working. Three areas that come to mind are carbon capture, industrial carbon pricing and critical minerals.
Without carbon capture, it's not possible to achieve net zero. Alberta and Ottawa have already made significant progress incentivizing carbon capture. This is not just about the oil sands and the pathways initiative but also about multiple sectors across the economy, from power generation to hydrogen, cement, fertilizer, petrochemicals and steel. In 2022, Alberta awarded rights to 25 carbon sequestration hubs across the province. What is needed for these hubs to be successful is supportive policy.
Industrial carbon pricing, if priced right and left to the province to implement, can help attract investment into a low-carbon economy. Alberta's TIER program, which dates back to 2007, is a great example. That's why it was left in place in Alberta's 2023 climate plan.
Without critical minerals such as lithium, cobalt, nickel and uranium, energy transition is not possible. Developing a full value chain, from extraction to processing and manufacturing, should be an essential part of not only climate policy but also economic, industrial and foreign policy.
There is a key characteristic to all three things I just mentioned and that is collaboration with the provinces and industry.
There are other areas in Ottawa's climate plan that create unnecessary conflict. The clean electricity regs and the oil and gas emissions cap are divisive policies that will lead to economic harm and constitutional challenges.
The emissions cap, if implemented, will be a production cap. Industry says it can't meet the cap without reducing production. The result will be more capital moving to other jurisdictions, undermining Canada's ability to be a conventional and clean energy superpower.
The clean electricity regs are unachievable for natural gas generators. Alberta's system operator, the AESO, says that there are no technical, affordable alternatives that can make compliance possible. In 2024, after getting completely off coal-fired electricity, Alberta's grid now relies on natural gas for 75% of total power. Much more power will be needed in the years ahead for electrification of both transportation and heating.
In conclusion, when Alberta developed its 2023 climate plan, I saw an opportunity to align climate policy with industrial policy. Climate policy, if done right, can not only reduce emissions but can also attract investments into new areas, such as carbon capture, hydrogen, battery storage, clean tech and renewables. It can also support oil and gas and kick-start the development of critical minerals. I see that same opportunity now if Canada's new climate competitiveness strategy can better balance climate and the economy to achieve the goal of being a conventional and clean energy superpower.
I look forward to your questions.