The agreement stresses that this pipeline will be privately constructed and financed — unlike the publicly owned Trans Mountain — and the intention is to have some Indigenous co-ownership.

That [“project of ‘national interest’”] designation means the pipeline — and possibly the tankers associated with transporting the oil — could be exempted from some federal laws. Those include the Fisheries Act, the Species At Risk Act and the Impact Assessment Act, among others.

Canada is committing to “collaborate with Alberta to provide a clear and efficient approval process for the Alberta bitumen pipeline.”

Importantly, Alberta is promising to “collaborate with B.C. to ensure British Columbians share substantial economic and financial benefits of the proposed pipeline.”

Ottawa will also suspend the proposed federal oil and gas emissions cap and Alberta’s requirements under the Clean Electricity Regulations (CER).

But the two sides are committed to increasing the industrial carbon price in the province — moving it from $95 a tonne now to a minimum of $130 a tonne. The federal government had previously demanded that price rise to $170 a tonne by 2030.

Both sides say they are committed to net-zero by 2050, despite the MOU that has the potential to turbocharge conventional energy production.

To help achieve that goal, both Canada and Alberta are moving ahead with Pathways Plus, an Alberta-based carbon capture, utilization and storage project, which could reduce the emissions intensity of exports from the province’s oilsands.

The two sides are also agreeing to dramatically lower methane emissions associated with the oil patch — a 75 per cent reduction target relative to 2014 emissions levels by 2035.

    • glibg@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      Hopefully renewables keep dropping oil prices worldwide until pipelines don’t make financial sense. Unfortunately we live in an economic system that only changes when the dollar signs tell it to.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      2 days ago

      ~100%, if it doesn’t fall apart before April.

      Genius. As someone who lives here, fighting with Ottawa was the main popular thing the UCP had to offer, and they just abandoned that, too. Nobody will get off on a spat with BC where their holiday cabin is.

  • leastaction@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    If they intend to exempt the pipeline from the FIsheries Act, the Species at Risk Act and the Impact Assessment Act the First Nations would not accept it - unless they bribe them with the offer of co-ownership, which is what I suspect that’s about.

    Please don’t anyone ever tell me again Carney is sensitive to the perils of climate change.

    Hopefully the pipeline will never get built because it requires private financing. And it should be made clear that neither government is to offer loan guarantees or buy equity in the pipeline, like Jason Kenney did with Keystone XL.

  • betanumerus@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    This is not solving anything about fossil emissions, and it wouldn’t help the energy transition. China and India are at least using their fossil energy to help renewables. Not so for this Canadian plan.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 days ago

    Full text, since it’s short.

    This time around, no notes. Carney hit on something brilliant, and has gotten the Alberta UCP to raise the carbon tax, build CCS and abandon their main message with popular appeal, all in exchange for a pipe dream that BC and the coastal FNs will never allow.

    Actually, one note. He just had to shoehorn in AI somehow.

    • SamuelRJankis@sh.itjust.works
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      This seems to be the deadline on how this turns out for the pipeline. I’d save the positive comments of Carney till then.

      There’s actually a fair bit of other to stuff to decifer in the docs as well.

      The application for this pipeline project will be ready to submit to the Major Projects Office on or before July 1, 2026.

      • CanadaPlus@futurology.today
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        22 hours ago

        I’m not sure why that’s unclear. Alberta will definitely have something ready to submit; the deadline is just there for the sake of completeness. The Major Projects Office can’t make BC and FNs agree to it once it’s submitted.

        If it falls apart before April when the new pricing comes in, that’s another matter. But even then the federal government hasn’t lost anything.