Sask. leads Canada in greenhouse gas emissions per capita. What's being done about it? - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Sask. leads Canada in greenhouse gas emissions per capita. What's being done about it?

The Saskatchewan government says the province may not comply with the federal governments plan to slash greenhouse gas emissions, as environmental groups call for more climate action in the province.

Province may not comply with Canadas plan to slash emissions, ministers say

Power plant with lots of smoke arising from it
The Saskatchewan government says the province may not comply with the federal governments plan to slash greenhouse gas emissions, as environmental groups call for more climate action on the part of the province. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Environmental groups are calling the Saskatchewan Ministry of Environment's latest budget "not enough," "utterlyinadequate" and "deeply disappointing" when it comes to reducing the amount of greenhouse gases that causeclimate change.

The ministry's proposedbudget for 2022-23says it will spend$92.6 million, which includes $1 million for continued delivery on Saskatchewan's climate change strategy and $400,000to accelerate growth inthe forestry sector.

"There's very little in this provincial budget that makes Saskatchewan's climate action plan more ambitious," said Peter Prebble, a board member of the Saskatchewan Environmental Society.

Mark Bigland-Pritchard, spokesperson for Climate Justice Saskatoon, said, "I'm not surprised. But inevitably, it's not enough. It's totally inadequate."

Environmental groups say it's time for Saskatchewan to get serious about fighting climate change which scientists say has contributed to deadly heat waves,drought, wildfires and extreme weather events including torrential rain storms.

Saskatchewan leads the country in greenhouse gas emissions per capita, according to data from the most recent National Inventory Report published in April 2021 by Environment and Climate Change Canada. The province's greenhouse gas emissions decreased by one megatonne from 2018 to 2019, but they've remained at relatively similar levels from 2014 to 2019, the latest data available.

A2022 report, which will include data from 2020, will be published later this month.

Warren Kaeding is sitting at a wood table with his hands out and a canadian flag behind him
Environment Minister Warren Kaeding says the new investments Ottawa announced in an effort to slash emissions wouldn't even come close to the cost that the federal government is going to be imposing on Saskatchewan families or small businesses or industries." (Government of Saskatchewan)

Prairie Resilience

The provincial government released Prairie Resilience, a "made-in-Saskatchewan" climate change strategy in 2017, with more than 40 commitments to address climate change.

The government has targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissionin some specific sectors of the Saskatchewan economy, but doesn't have a provincialgoal for2030.

"Given the fact that it is total provincewide greenhouse gas emissions that matter most in terms of Saskatchewan's impact on the global climate, the lack of an official 2030 emission reduction goal for Saskatchewan is of concern," Prebble said.

Saskatchewan's Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Bronwyn Eyre and Environment Minister Warren Kaeding refused to commit to a total emission reduction target inrecent interviews with CBC News.

Saskatchewan Minister of Energy Bronwyn Eyre says Saskatchewan wont comply with Ottawas emission plan or set more ambitious targets for the province, without seeing the data the federal government used to make decisions about caps on greenhouse gases. (CBC)

The Saskatchewan Environmental Society would like to see the provincial government aim for a 45 per cent reduction in annual province-wide greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.

Canada's ambitious 2030 reduction targets

The federal government released a plan on Tuesday to dramatically curb greenhouse gas emissions over the next eight years to meet ambitious 2030 reduction targets.

In an effort to slash emissions by 40 to 45 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030, Ottawa has announced some $9.1 billion in new investments that will, among other things, boost incentives for zero-emission vehicles, sweeten tax breaks for companies in the fossil fuels sector that embrace carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) technology which Saskatchewan has embracedand work to make Canada's electricity grid cleaner.

All efforts are to stopthe planet from warming to a point of crisis.

However Kaeding said the new investments "wouldn't even come close to the cost that the federal government is going to be imposing on Saskatchewan families or small businesses or industries."

WATCH: Prime Minister Trudeau discussesnew emissions reductions plan

Canada's new emissions reduction plan calls for a 40 per cent cut by 2030

2 years ago
Duration 1:31
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces Canada's Emissions Reduction Plan to keep the country on track to net-zero by 2050.

The plan states that the current carbon pricing regime will remain the cornerstone of the federal climate plan. The carbon price is set to rise steeply from its current level of $50 per tonne of carbon dioxideemissions to $170 by 2030 to push consumers toward cleaner energy sources.

Canada is also pledging to reduce methane emissions from the oil and gas sector by at least 75 per cent below 2012 levels by 2030.

In addition, the federalgovernment will soon implement a hard cap on emissions meaning that if companies want to pump out more fossil fuels in the coming decades, they'll have to do so with significantly lower emissions intensity.

Work being done on a Saskatchewan farm.
Almost two-thirds of Canadian greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture come from the prairies. More than half of those emissions come from Alberta and Saskatchewan, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada. (Tory Gillis/CBC)

Sask. won't cooperate without seeing data, ministers say

Eyre and Kaeding said Saskatchewan won't comply with Ottawa's plan to curb emissions or set more ambitious targets for the province, without seeing the data the federal government used to make decisions about caps on greenhouse gases.

"The biggest frustration we have in terms of the federal plans is the data sharing," Eyre said.

"They are using data about Saskatchewan that they don't show us what they're imposing on us based on data collected in Ottawa about oil and gas sites they've never visited."

Eyre and Kaeding said there wasn't any "meaningful" consultation between the provincial government and federal officials, besides a short phone call.

"We certainly need to see and have an opportunity to see the homework that the federal government is trying to put these numbers forward on," Kaeding said.

Eyre said she recently raised the issue of "non-transparency around data" with federal Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson.

Process operator Bill Wingerak (foreground) works in the control room of a carbon capture and storage facility at the Boundary Dam Power Station in Estevan, Sask., in 2014. (Michael Bell/The Canadian Press)

Wilkinson's office and the ministry of environment and climate change did not respond to CBC's request for comment by publication time.

More climate action needed

Bigland-Pritchard said the province's climate plan focuses a lot on adapting to climate change, "but when it comes to actually reducing our emissions, which is what we need it's utterly inadequate."

He and Prebble want to see a comprehensive plan to get to zero emissions, along with money for a home energy retrofit program, a major program to retrofit commercial buildings in Saskatchewan, major initiatives in the transport sector that would promote the purchase ofzero-emission vehiclesand investments to enhance urban transportation.

"We need to basically be ready to run our transportation system in this province on non-fossil fuel vehicles. And we should be preparing our infrastructure for that," Prebble said.

Prebble added the government should phase out all Saskatchewan's conventional coal-fired power stations by 2030 and replace them with 1,000 megawatts of imported hydro from Manitoba, implement new electricity efficiency measuresand promote a much larger rollout of wind and solar power combined with energy storage.

"There's no evidence that the Saskatchewan government plans to cooperate with the federal government on these kinds of initiatives," he said.

Moves taken by the Saskatchewan goverment include the 2019 release of the Methane Action Plan (MAP)with a goal of reducing methane emissions from venting and flaring activities in the upstream oil and gas industry by 4.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) annually by 2025.Total MAP emissions reductions between 2020-2030 will be at least 38.2 million tonnes CO2e, according to the government.

The provincial oil and gas sector has reduced methane emissions by almost 50 per cent since 2015, according to a December 2021 government report.

In the electricity generation sector, SaskPower has pledged to reduce its emissions by at least 50 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030 and thegovernment also committed to sourcingup to 50 per centof electricity from renewableenergy, including wind and solar.

It also plans tobring emissions fromgovernment buildings down to 85,489 tonnes per year and a10 per cent reduction in emissions intensity from large industrial emitters by 2030.

Saskatchewan doesn't havetargets for the agriculture or transportation sectors, though they're among the highest emitting industries.

Almost two-thirds of agriculture emissions come from the prairies, with more than half of the sector's emissions coming from Alberta and Saskatchewan, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada.

There are also no sector-specific reduction targets for the residential and commercial buildings sector and Saskatchewan's municipal sector.

"Emission reduction targets for each of these sectors are badly needed," Prebble said.

With files from John Paul Tasker