Good afternoon, and thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today.
My name is Tony Scozzafava. I'm the vice-president of taxation for Capital Power Corporation, based here in Edmonton. With me is my colleague, Dr. David Lewin, senior vice-president responsible for development of our proposed IGCC power plant.
I'll go over the recommendation that we've made to the committee in our written submission, and then I'll be happy to answer any questions. However, I'm a tax accountant, and I'm clearly not qualified to speak about turning coal into gas and then taking the gas and producing power, so I'll allow Dr. Lewin to answer those questions regarding the technology.
A word about Capital Power Corporation, as you may not be familiar with the name. We're a new company, created only this summer from the spinoff of power generation assets by EPCOR Utilities, also based here in Edmonton. Although we're a new company, we are one of Canada's largest independent investor-owned power generators. We employ more than 1,000 people and have interests in 31 power plants, operating in three Canadian provinces and eight U.S. states. Our operations are North American in scope and our vision is to become one of the most respected power producers on the continent.
Now to the specific recommendation we've made to the committee for the upcoming federal budget.
We believe at Capital Power that coal will continue to be an indispensable part of our energy mix going forward, in Alberta and globally. At the same time, we recognize that we need to develop a new generation of coal plants that can meet the demands of any future carbon emissions regime, and right now the global consensus is that carbon capture and storage, CCS, is the best option we have to achieve that goal.
To meet our current policy goals for carbon reduction, we have to accelerate the deployment of carbon capture and storage technologies into commercial use. We believe that carbon pricing will eventually make CCS economical, but that would take longer than governments and the public are currently willing to accept.
We have to be clear that reducing carbon emissions is a considerable added cost for power generation, no matter which approach we take. We believe that coal, with carbon capture and storage, can be cost competitive with other low-carbon options, but right now all those options have to be subsidized. Carbon capture, in particular, is like other low-carbon energy technologies in a key respect. The cost of proving the technology on a commercial scale is very high, but that cost is expected to drop dramatically and rapidly over time as it is scaled up.
There is no mystery to this. It's the same cycle that we're seeing in other technologies, such as solar power. Technologies that are so expensive as to be commercially unviable at a given time can become very viable within a short period of time. In the interim, they are supported everywhere in the world through power pricing and other means. The challenge for CCS right now is to identify early adopters and get them through the first phase of proving the technology on a commercial scale.
Capital Power has invested a decade of effort to position itself to become one of those early adopters. We need the support of the federal government to show the potential of CCS on an accelerated timeline, so the debate comes down to how best to do that.
The federal government has supported action on greenhouse gases through a variety of mechanisms, including giving great credit, I guess, for looking at those mechanisms. One of those mechanisms is to accelerate the CCA, or capital cost allowance, allowing costs of adopting new technologies to be written off on a faster schedule that recognizes the upfront cost burden and risk that early adopters take on.
We think it's a good approach, in combination with others, and it's already in place, supporting other low-emission energy technologies. Those include renewable sources as well as the efficient and responsible use of fossil fuels.
The essence of our recommendation is this: We respectfully ask that the federal government treat CCS equipment on an equal basis with other clean energy technologies by extending the scope of the 50% CCA rate under section 43.2 of the Income Tax Act to this equipment. We think it is the right step for the federal government for several reasons. Most importantly, capital cost allowance is ideally suited to recognize the nature of investment in CCS and other technologies. That investment is heavily loaded upfront and then pays back over time as the market catches up.
The measure we are recommending is a deferral, not a permanent subsidy. By our best estimate today, the federal government would only defer $17 million of tax revenue in the plant's first two years of operation in 2015 and 2016, but the deferred revenue would be recouped over the remaining length of the project.
The change we are recommending would continue the federal government's commitment to CCS, a commitment for which it deserves great credit. The Government of Canada supported its development, including our own work at Capital Power, adjusting the capital cost allowance to support technology as it moves into implementation phase.
More generally, it's important to treat clean energy technologies equally, to recognize that different areas of the country have a different mix of energy sources.
It would support Canadian industry and technology, including new projects and a major infusion of new knowledge and expertise. It would support renewal of some of our most basic infrastructure and at the same time help transition a core industry into a very different future.
Finally, as to the new plant that we're proposing in particular, it would help establish Alberta and Canada as global leaders in technology-based solutions to reduce greenhouse gases.
I thank you for the opportunity to be here today to speak to you in person. It's been an honour, and I hope to meet with you again.
Dr. David Lewin and I are happy to answer your questions. Thank you.