No, no. You can't kid a kidder.
Evidence of meeting #16 for Natural Resources in the 44th Parliament, 1st session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was cap.
A video is available from Parliament.
Evidence of meeting #16 for Natural Resources in the 44th Parliament, 1st session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was cap.
A video is available from Parliament.
Liberal
The Chair Liberal John Aldag
We're out of time on this one.
It does make it very challenging for the interpreters when there's more than one conversation going.
We're at the six-minute—
NDP
Liberal
NDP
Liberal
The Chair Liberal John Aldag
Exactly.
We requested the ministers to be here for the first hour, but we were late getting started.
I'm going to hope we can keep you here for at least the next round, which would take us 25 minutes.
With that, we're going to go over—
Liberal
Liberal
Conservative
Larry Maguire Conservative Brandon—Souris, MB
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I was really wanting to just sit back and watch the “marriage” continue here.
Conservative
Larry Maguire Conservative Brandon—Souris, MB
But anyway, I think even my colleague from the NDP will agree with me that there is a new reality out there.
By the way, welcome to both ministers as well.
You both referred to it in your opening comments, that there's a new reality. The world has changed in the last month and otherwise.
We've had a lot of witnesses come before us and state that increasing Canadian natural gas is integral for countries to transition away from coal and some of the higher carbon-emitting forms of energy. Industry experts have also stated that imposing these caps on natural gas will impede their ability to get more Canadian energy to market, at a time when you're indicating that we need that.
If the mission is to reduce the global greenhouse gases—and it is—why is your government moving forward with an emissions cap that could hinder the exports of Canadian materials?
Liberal
Jonathan Wilkinson Liberal North Vancouver, BC
I can maybe start on this.
The cap is on emissions, it's not necessarily on production. The focus there is driving people to increasingly improve the emissions performance.
If you are going to look at exporting LNG as a transition to hydrogen, which is where everybody in Europe and North America wants to go, you need to do it in a way that's low emission. You can't do it by using natural gas to liquefy. You have to use it by using electric drives. You actually have to tie it to displacement of other hydrocarbons in other parts of the world. You have to ensure that it's part of a broader energy transition. You need to implement the methane regs to ensure you're actually reducing the emissions associated—the content associated with—natural gas, so that it exactly works in the right direction.
Conservative
Larry Maguire Conservative Brandon—Souris, MB
Thanks. I just wondered if you recognized that an emissions cap on natural gas could slow down the energy transition in other countries from being able to transition away from coal.