- buy Alberta-based offsets
- buy "emissions performance credits" from other emitters (who receive these credits in exchange for having achieved a lower intensity than their target)
- contribute to an Albertan technology fund at $15.00/tonne over their target
Some more details about SGER
- lower targets for new facilities: facilities opened in the last 8 years have lower targets initially - 10% if you are 8 years old, 8% if you are 6, down to 2% for facilities in operation four years or less
- Offsets may be open to double-counting: details on qualification, methodology, etc. aren't in place, but the only requirement in the proposed regulation that covers additionality is a condition that the emissions reduction used as an offset not have been required by law. This leaves open the possibility that reductions funded by other provincial or federal initiatives could be used as an offset within the SGER system.
- Baseline intensity will be an average of 2003, 2004 and 2005 emissions, except for new facilities, which will use their third year of operations
- No longer-term targets - the Minister can change targets and the legislation expires in 2014, but no schedule of targets is set out in the SGER legislation.
National Post coverage
Pembina news release
My comments: I have to agree with Pembina here - intensity targets, especially such low targets applied to an industry that has such huge growth, are barely going to slow down our GHG increases. (Pembina calculates that the SGER will allow a doubling of tar sands emissions by 2010 relative to 2003). Meanwhile, I'm wondering why Alberta has come out with this, especially so soon before the federal announcement. I assume its meant more as a bargaining chip/preemptive strike than a real system - Alberta's 100 emitters are too few to make for a liquid emissions trading market, and I don't think this system as it stands could be easily linked to larger carbon markets, if at all. I also don't think that the Albertan system could meet "equivalency" requirements for soon-to-be-announced federal system. The Federal Conservative strategy is likely to recycle the Liberal LFE system, with slightly more stringent targets, so we should expect 15% or higher intensity targets at the federal level. And the national system will also give access to offsets from across Canada and (maybe just maybe) international credits. So is this just an attempt to stake some ground, with an eventual goal of forcing reductions/exemptions from the feds? Or will Alberta make this a big issue to stand its ground on? Anyone with a better sense of Albertan politics (or devious political maneuvering in general), feel free to enlighten me.
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