Turning The Corner: Regulatory Framework
Turning The Corner: Regulatory Framework
Turning The Corner: Regulatory Framework
March 2008
Regulatory Framework
for
Industrial Greenhouse
Gas Emissions
For more information:
www.ecoaction.gc.ca
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(1-800-622-6232, or TTY 1-800-926-9105)
© Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, represented by the Minister of Environment, 2008. All rights reserved.
Overview iii
1. Introduction 1
3. Consultations 5
i
7. The Economic Impacts of the Industrial Regulations 22
7.1 Impact of the regulatory framework 22
7.2 Economic Impacts 22
8. Next Steps 24
Overview
l The April 2007 Regulatory Framework for Air Emissions laid out the broad design of the
regulations for industrial emissions of both greenhouse gases and air pollutants.
l This document sets out the final regulatory framework for industrial greenhouse gas
emissions. It includes both an elaboration and a strengthening of the April 2007 regulatory
framework.
l The federal government still intends to work to reach equivalency agreements with any
interested provinces that set enforceable provincial emission standards that are at least as
stringent as the federal standards.
l The final regulatory framework will contribute significantly to the commitment in the 2007
Speech from the Throne to implement a national strategy to reduce Canada's total
greenhouse gas emissions by 20% below 2006 levels by 2020.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
l There will be an incentive until 2018 for facilities to be built carbon-capture ready.
l A special incentive will be provided through the target structure for high-efficiency co-
generation.
Emission reductions
The regulatory framework is expected to achieve approximately 165 Mt in direct and indirect
emission reductions from the industrial sector by 2020; that is, about a 37% reduction from
projected levels or a 21% reduction below 2006 levels. This does not include the additional
25 Mt in targeted reductions from the electricity sector.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Next steps
l The regulatory framework for industrial greenhouse gas emissions will now be
translated into regulatory language. Draft regulations are expected to be published
in the Canada Gazette, Part I for public comment in fall 2008.
l Final regulations are expected to be approved and published in the Canada Gazette,
Part II in fall 2009. The greenhouse gas provisions of the regulations are to come
into force, as planned, on January 1, 2010.
l Air pollutant elements will be added to the draft regulations once the regulatory
framework for air pollutants has been finalized in spring 2008.
v
1. Introduction
On April 26, 2007, the Government of Canada released Turning the Corner: An Action Plan to Reduce
Greenhouse Gases and Air Pollution. 1 This plan set out an ambitious agenda to improve the
environment and the health of Canadians through a series of concrete, innovative measures to reduce
emissions of greenhouse gases and air pollutants. Rather than relying solely on the voluntary measures
used in the past, for the first time, the government is introducing mandatory and enforceable actions
across a broad range of sectors.
In addition, the government committed to reducing Canada's total emissions of greenhouse gases,
relative to 2006 levels, by 20% by 2020 and by 60% to 70% by 2050.
The Turning the Corner action plan has several components, including:
l a regulatory framework for industrial emissions of greenhouse gases and air pollutants;
l the development of a mandatory fuel-efficiency standard for automobiles, beginning with
the 2011 model year, as well as action to reduce emissions from the rail, marine, and
aviation sectors, and from on-road and off-road vehicles and engines;
l the implementation of new energy performance standards to strengthen existing energy-
efficiency standards for a number of products that consume electricity, including light
bulbs, in order to reduce emissions from the use of consumer and commercial products;
and
l the development of measures to improve indoor air quality.
Since the release of the Turning the Corner action plan, the Government of Canada has made significant
progress in all of these areas.
The April 2007 regulatory framework, entitled Regulatory Framework for Air Emissions, laid out the broad
design of the regulations for industrial emissions of both greenhouse gases and air pollutants.2 This
document provides a detailed description of the final regulatory framework for industrial greenhouse gas
emissions. The framework for industrial emissions of air pollutants will be finalized in spring 2008.
Section 2 summarizes the broad regulatory framework for industrial greenhouse gas emissions as set out
in April 2007 in the Regulatory Framework for Air Emissions. In Section 3, a brief overview of the
consultations undertaken is provided. In Sections 4 and 5, the final greenhouse gas regulatory
framework is elaborated, first with respect to the application of the target and, secondly, with respect to
the design of the compliance mechanisms. Section 6 reiterates the government's intention to move from
an emission-intensity based system to a fixed emission cap system in the future. In Section 7, a
summary of the estimated economic impacts of the regulations on industrial greenhouse gases is given.
Section 8 outlines the steps in finalizing the regulations.
1
2. The April 2007 Regulatory
Framework for Industrial
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
The regulatory framework for industrial greenhouse gas emissions proposed that the following sectors
would be covered by the regulations:
The targets for greenhouse gas emissions will set reductions in emission intensity from 2006 levels that
will come into force in 2010. The government has committed to review the regulations every five years in
order to assess progress in reaching the government's medium- and long-term emission reduction
objectives. The first such review would take place in 2012 and would entail an assessment of the
effectiveness of measures taken to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and of advances in industrial
technology in order to determine the potential for further emission reductions.
The framework for industrial greenhouse gas emissions has two key components: (1) stringent,
mandatory short-term emission-intensity reduction targets, relative to 2006 emissions and (2) compliance
mechanisms that provide firms with flexibility in how they meet their targets. Each of these components
will be addressed in turn.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
2.1 Targets
The April 2007 framework set an initial required reduction of 18% from 2006 emission-intensity levels in
2010 for existing facilities. Every year thereafter, a 2% continuous improvement in emission intensity
would be required. By 2015, therefore, an emission-intensity reduction of 26% from 2006 levels would be
required, with a further reduction to 33% by 2020. The emission-intensity approach ties the emission
reduction targets to production. This allows emission reductions to be achieved while accommodating
economic growth.
New facilities, which are those whose first year of operation is 2004 or later, would be granted a three-
year commissioning period before they would face an emission-intensity reduction target. After the third
year, new facilities would be required to improve their emission intensity each year by 2%. A cleaner fuel
standard would be applied, thereby setting the target as if they were using the designated fuel. A flexible
approach would be taken in special cases where the equipment or technology used in a new plant
facilitates carbon capture and storage or otherwise offers a significant and imminent potential for emission
reductions.
The purpose of this policy is to provide an incentive for new facilities to choose cleaner fuels or to invest
in the technology needed for carbon capture and storage or in other less emission-intensive technologies.
For both existing and new facilities, fixed process emissions, which are emissions tied to production and
for which there is no alternative reduction technology, would receive a 0% target in the regulations. In
other words, for these types of emissions, there is no way, with current technology, for them to be reduced
except by shutting down production.
Technology fund: Firms could obtain credits for compliance purposes by contributing to a technology
fund. The fund would be a means to promote the development, deployment, and diffusion of technologies
that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases across industry. A third-party entity, at arm's-length from
government, would be created to administer the fund. A key principle is that there would be no inter-
regional transfer of wealth.
From 2010 to 2012, the contribution rate for the fund would be $15 per tonne of carbon dioxide
equivalent. In 2013, the contribution rate would be $20 per tonne. Thereafter, the rate would escalate
yearly at the rate of growth of nominal GDP to 2017.
Inter-firm trading: Firms whose actual emission intensity in a given year is below their target would
receive tradable credits equal to the difference between their target and their actual emission intensity,
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
multiplied by their production in that year. These credits could be banked for future use or sold to other
parties, including other regulated firms.
Offset System: Offsets are projects that result in incremental real, verified domestic reductions or
removals of greenhouse gas emissions in activities that are not covered by the federal greenhouse gas
regulations. These projects would generate credits that firms could use for compliance purposes.
Clean Development Mechanism: Firms could use certain credits from the Kyoto Protocol's Clean
Development Mechanism. Access to these credits for compliance purposes would be limited to 10% of
each firm's total target.
One-time credit for early action: Firms that took verified action between 1992 and 2006 to reduce their
greenhouse gas emissions would be eligible to apply for a share of a one-time credit for early action. A
maximum of 15 Mt worth of credits would be allocated, with no more than 5 Mt to be used in any one
year. Firms would be required to submit evidence of changes in processes or facility improvements they
had undertaken that resulted in verifiable, incremental greenhouse gas emission reductions. The
maximum allocation for emission reductions would be one credit for each tonne of carbon dioxide
equivalent reduction. If the total tonnage of emission reductions applied for were to exceed 15 Mt, the
credits would be distributed to individual firms in proportion to their contribution to the total emission
reduction achieved.
Under the April 2007 analysis, the economic costs of regulating industrial emissions of both greenhouse
gases and air pollutants were estimated not to exceed 0.5% of GDP in any given year up to 2020. At the
same time, the environmental and health benefits were estimated to exceed $6 billion per year in 2015.
4
3. Consultations
Following the release of the framework in April, 2007, the government consulted extensively with
provinces and territories, as well as with non-governmental organizations, Aboriginal peoples, industry,
and other stakeholders, on key policy and regulatory development issues in the framework that remained
to be elaborated.
The federal, provincial, and territorial governments have initiated a cooperative process to work through
the regulatory issues, through the Environmental Protection and Planning Committee of the Canadian
Council of Ministers of the Environment. Some provinces have indicated an interest in negotiating
equivalency agreements with the federal government.
Coverage
l Whether small facilities should be excluded from the regulations in order to minimize
administrative burden, and, if so, on what basis?
Targets
Technology Fund
Offset System
l Types of Clean Development Mechanism credits that would be eligible for compliance with the
domestic regulations.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
l Process and criteria for allocating the 15 Mt credit for early action.
l Method for implementing the 5 Mt yearly limit.
l Choice of governance structure.
The government has received extensive feedback on the April 2007 regulatory framework.
Provinces and territories have raised concerns about possible duplication with provincial or territorial
regulatory regimes and about equity among sectors and regions.
Overall, industry has indicated it will have difficulty in meeting the targets through in-house reductions
alone. Some sectors have argued that the targets are too stringent and that the continuous improvement
requirement is onerous. Other sectors feel the targets are manageable if there is adequate access to the
various compliance mechanisms.
6
4. Final Industrial Greenhouse
Gas Framework: Targets
The April 2007 regulatory framework set out a series of policy decisions regarding the design of the
framework. The final regulatory framework for industrial greenhouse gas emissions, as described in this
section, reflects the results of the extensive consultations with provinces and territories, environmental
groups, and industry, detailed in Annex 1, as well as additional in-depth analysis.
In developing the final regulatory framework for industrial greenhouse gas emissions, the government has
been guided by principles of environmental protection, economic development, and regulatory efficiency.
In assessing policy choices for the framework, the government balanced the impact that various options
would have on the emission reductions to be achieved; the competitiveness of Canadian industries and
the overall economic cost of the regulations; and the government's ability to design effective and
enforceable regulations. Where appropriate, the unique circumstances of some sectors have been taken
into account, within the guiding criteria of the framework. This final framework contributes significantly to
the commitment in the 2007 Speech from the Throne to a national strategy to reduce Canada's total
greenhouse gas emissions by 20% from 2006 levels by 2020 and by 60% to 70% by 2050.
The federal government still intends to work to reach equivalency agreements with any interested
provinces that set enforceable provincial emission standards that are at least as stringent as the federal
standards.
Facility-specific: Each facility within a sector receives an individual target of an 18% reduction from its
own 2006 emission intensity.
This approach is applied in sectors where factors beyond the control of a facility operator affect
emissions. For example, terrain characteristics, elevation, configuration, and diameter of pipe all have an
impact on emissions from natural gas pipeline facilities, yet these are features that cannot be altered by
existing pipeline facilities. Facility-specific targets are also used in sectors with complex and diverse
facility structures.
Facility-specific targets will be applied in the following sectors: iron ore pelletizing, potash, base metal
smelting, chemicals, fertilizers, iron and steel, ilmenite (titanium), oil sands, petroleum refining, natural
gas pipelines, and upstream oil and gas.
Sector-wide: All facilities within a sector face the same target, which is an 18% reduction from the
sector's average 2006 emission intensity.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
This approach is used in sectors where facility structures are more homogeneous in structure across the
whole sector and less complex. It will be applied in the lime, pulp and paper, aluminum and alumina, and
cement sectors.
Corporate-specific: Each company within a sector receives a target of an 18% reduction from the
average 2006 emission intensity of its entire fleet of facilities.
This approach will be used in the electricity sector, as it provides a strong incentive for investment in new
non- and low-emitting power generation since the entire fleet of facilities will include all types of electricity
generation. With this approach, electricity companies can reduce their emission intensity by replacing
high-emission intensity facilities (for example, coal and other fossil fuels) with non-emitting or lower-
emission intensity facilities (for example, wind and other renewable energy, hydro, nuclear).
SECTOR THRESHOLD
Chemicals 50 kt CO2e
Upstream oil and gas 3 kt/facility and 10,000 barrels of oil equivalent/day/company
Electricity 10 MW
The upstream oil and gas sector comprises a very large number of facilities with a wide variety in size.
The proposed threshold is much more stringent than what is currently used by the Government of Alberta
in its July 2007 regulations3 for emissions from this sector. The government is committed to achieving a
common threshold and common reporting regime in Alberta. It will continue discussion with the
Government of Alberta on these issues, seeking a common practical approach to emissions coverage,
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
including the phasing of thresholds and the identification of additional measures that could be
implemented to address emissions in the rest of the sector. The federal government will also engage in
discussions with the Governments of Saskatchewan and British Columbia. These discussions will be
informed by the additional information to be provided to the government in response to its December 8,
2007, Section 71 Notice.4
[1]
from chemical processes that produce carbon dioxide emissions and are fixed to production; and
[2]
created in a process where:
a) carbon that is chemically bound in the raw materials is removed from these materials to produce
a carbon-free product (that is, less than 1% carbon by mass); or
b) carbon is used to remove an undesired component from the raw material and where the raw
material is not substitutable; or
c) unintentional oxidation of hydrocarbon feedstocks results from the catalytic conversion of these
feedstocks into products; or
d) carbon dioxide entrained in ethane gas feedstock is removed and released to the atmosphere in
order to process the feedstock.
New facilities will include facilities that came into operation in 2004 or later and include greenfield
facilities, major expansions and major transformations.
4 Canada Gazette, Part I, Supplement, Vol. 141, no. 49, December 8, 2007, available at canadagazette.gc.ca/partI/2007/
20071208/pdf/g1-14149.pdf.
5 Other jurisdictions tend to use either a physical capacity or value of investment relative to the value of existing capital stock
as a measure.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Only the expanded or transformed portion of the facility would be treated as new, unless the integrated
nature of the facility requires that the entire facility be treated as new. Re-opened facilities would be
treated as existing facilities, unless they met one or more of the above conditions.
This approach will apply to the potash, natural gas pipeline, upstream oil and gas, oil sands, and
electricity sectors. A fuel-specific cleaner fuel standard will apply to the electricity sector which will be
equivalent to the emission-intensity performance of: “supercritical” technology for coal-fired generation;
“natural gas combined cycle” technology for gas-fired generation; and "oil-fired gas turbine" technology for
oil-fired generation.
In the other sectors, the cleaner fuel standard will be based on natural gas. In the case of oil sands, the
cleaner fuel standard will be process-specific, with a specific natural gas-based cleaner fuel standard for
each of mining, in situ, and upgrading.
In those sectors in which carbon capture and storage is a viable option for reducing emissions, for new
facilities that do not meet the cleaner fuel standard but that are built capture-ready, the standard would
not apply until 2018. This would mean that the 2% annual continuous improvement target would apply to
the facility's actual emission intensity. This incentive for carbon capture and storage will apply to the oil
sands, electricity, petroleum refining, chemical, and fertilizer sectors.
In other sectors, fuel choice is a less important driver of emission intensity, and the target approach for
existing facilities provides an adequate incentive for new facilities to choose cleaner fuels. There is,
therefore, no need for an explicit cleaner fuel standard.
For the iron ore pelletizing, lime, iron and steel, titanium, pulp and paper, aluminum and alumina, and
cement sectors, a sector-average approach will be taken. For these sectors, a new facility's target in its
fourth year of operation would be calculated as the target for that year for existing facilities; that is, an
18% reduction from the sector's average emission intensity in 2006, multiplied by the relevant continuous
improvement factors. For the base metal smelting sector, a facility-specific approach will be taken, such
that a new base metal smelter's target in its fourth year of operation would be calculated as a 2%
reduction from the facility's third year emission intensity.
In all cases, a three-year commissioning period applies, during which the new facility will not face an
emission reduction target but will have to report its emissions. This is done in order to allow a new facility
time to reach normal operating conditions, so that its target is not based on an artificial baseline (which
could have meant that it had fewer reductions to undertake).
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Carbon capture and storage has the potential to store significant amounts of carbon dioxide in Canada.
The recently-released report by the ecoENERGY Carbon Capture and Storage Task Force estimates that
the Canada-wide potential "could be as high as one-third to one-half" of Canada's projected greenhouse
gas emissions in 2050.6 Estimates by Environment Canada and work undertaken for the Government of
Alberta suggest there is a potential to capture and store 50 to 55 Mt of carbon dioxide annually by 2020.
It is a technology that is most cost-effective when it involves large volumes of carbon dioxide, such as
those produced at oil sands and electricity generation facilities, and when it is built into new facilities,
although it can also be applied to existing facilities. The government therefore intends to develop targets
based on carbon capture and storage for upgrader and in-situ facilities in the oil sands sector, and for new
coal-fired electricity-generating facilities, that begin operation in 2012 or later. The targets will apply in
2018. The exact specification of these targets will be determined during the development of the proposed
regulations. Emissions of a regulated facility that are captured and stored will be considered as emission
reductions. Application of these targets is expected to generate an additional 30 Mt in reductions in 2020
beyond those expected from the basic regulatory framework.
Oil sands As above Process- specific cleaner fuel Target based on carbon
standards for mining, in-situ, and capture and storage for
upgrading in-situ and upgrading
l based on natural gas l effective 2018
Electricity As above Fuel-specific cleaner fuel standards for Target based on carbon
l coal, gas, and oil capture and storage for
l incentive for carbon capture and coal
storage until 2018 l effective 2018
6 Canada's Fossil Energy Future: The Way Forward on Carbon Capture and Storage, January 9, 2008, p.2 available at
http://www.nrcan-rncan.gc.ca/com/resoress/publications/fosfos/fosfos-eng.php
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
l development of an East-West transmission grid and sub-sea cable on the Atlantic coast;
l development of further major hydroelectric projects, such as Peace River C and Lower Churchill;
l introduction of new nuclear reactors; and
l retirement of fossil-fuel electricity generation facilities at the end of their expected life.
Should it not be possible to move ahead on this in cooperation with the provincial governments and
electricity utilities, the federal government will consider other options, including regulations if necessary, to
meet this goal.
4.8 Co-generation
The April 2007 framework was silent on the treatment of co-generation. Co-generation is the
simultaneous generation of heat (or steam) and electricity from the same fuel source. It can result in
reduced overall emissions relative to producing heat and electricity separately. The target approach is
designed to provide an incentive for facilities to use high-efficiency co-generation.
To reflect the efficiency gains inherent in co-generation, emission targets for facilities that use co-
generation would be based on an adjusted baseline that would equal the emission levels if the electricity
and heat were produced separately. The emissions that would be deemed to come from the production
of heat would be based on those of a stand-alone conventional boiler operating at 80% efficiency. On the
basis of these deemed emissions, existing facilities would face an emission-intensity reduction target of
18% in 2010 on the intensity corresponding to heat production and a 2% annual continual improvement
requirement thereafter.
The emissions deemed to be due to the production of electricity would be based on the emission intensity
rate of stand-alone natural gas combined cycle electricity generation, or 0.418 t/MWh. There would be no
reduction target on intensity corresponding to the production of electricity.
This target structure recognizes efficiency gains from using co-generation and provides a strong incentive
for facilities to invest in co-generation by reducing the reductions required from a co-generation facility.
For the cement sector, an expanded definition of production will be applied in order to provide an
incentive for this sector to use waste material from other industries in place of emission-intensive clinker.
In the petroleum refining sector, defining production is a challenge since refineries produce many different
types of products. The possibility of using the third-party proprietary Solomon Refinery Activity Index to
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
calculate a facility's greenhouse gas emission intensity will be further explored, with a view to using it,
should it be feasible and practical so to do.
An emission intensity target will be set for nitrous oxide emissions from adipic acid production that
recognizes the voluntary early action taken by industry before any regulations required it.
Unintentional fugitive methane emissions from sources such as equipment leaks and storage from the
upstream oil and gas and oil sands sectors and natural gas transmission, distribution, and storage
facilities were not identified as covered sources in the April 2007 framework. Reduction requirements for
these sources will be implemented through regulated codes of practices; that is, there will be provisions in
the regulations that set out best operating practices and technologies. These reductions would be
accounted for outside of the regulated activities. This approach is consistent with proposed requirements
covering air pollutant emissions from the same sources at these facilities.
The fertilizer sector faces particular challenges related to dependence on natural gas feedstocks,
considerable international trade competition, limited ability to pass on costs, and high potential for
relocation outside of Canada. To address these challenges, a two-person task force, consisting of a
Member of Parliament and an industry representative, will be set up and mandated to return with options
for a target approach for the sector that is consistent with the overall framework.
13
5. Final Industrial Greenhouse Gas
Framework: Compliance Mechanisms
The compliance mechanisms are designed to ensure the environmental integrity of the regulatory system,
while providing compliance flexibility for industry, so as to reduce the cost of compliance and minimize the
administrative burden.
In addition, the need for sufficient liquidity in the emission trading market was considered in the design of
the compliance mechanisms. A flourishing emission trading system will help to keep the overall economic
cost of emission reductions down, both for industry and for the economy as a whole.
Monies received from contributing firms will then be invested by the fund in qualifying greenhouse gas
emission reduction technology projects. The fund is designed to act as an incentive to support the
development and deployment of technologies to reduce emissions, both in the near term and in the
future.
Technological advancement and innovation are critical to achieving significant, long-term reductions in
greenhouse gas emissions. New technologies, both under development and ready for deployment,
provide a means to transform Canada's industrial production and thereby significantly reduce emissions.
Many of these promising technologies face technical, fiscal, or operational barriers to development and
deployment, however. The fund would act as an important means of overcoming such barriers and
facilitating the diffusion of technologies that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases across industry.
The dual role of the technology fund, as a compliance mechanism and as a technology incentive, informs
its design. Moreover, the design of the fund will respect the principle that there be no inter-regional
transfer of wealth.
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Figure 1. Technology fund contribution rate in dollars per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) and
contribution limit on deployment component, 2010-2018.
25 100
90
20 80
70
% of regulatory obligation
$/t CO2e
15 60
Contribution Rate
(left-hand axis) 50
Contribution limit on
10 40
deployment
component
30
(right-hand axis)
5 20
10
0 0
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
The contribution limit is the maximum number of credits a firm is eligible to receive for its contributions to
the fund in a given year. It is determined as a percentage of each firm's total regulatory obligation (that is,
its emission reduction obligation) for all of its facilities in that year, expressed in tonnes of carbon dioxide
equivalent; for example, 70% in 2010.
Access to the additional 5 Mt of credits available annually through the research and development
component of the fund will be pro rated based on a firm's share of the total regulatory obligation of the
regulated industrial sectors. For example, a firm whose regulatory obligation represented 0.1% of the
total industrial obligation could contribute to receive up to 5000 tonnes of credits. These credits would be
in addition to those available through the fund's deployment and infrastructure component.
Firms will be able to contribute to the technology fund and receive credits at the given contribution rate
and up to the contribution limit for that year.
The fund will be designed as a portfolio investment fund. That is, in making its investment decisions, the
fund will have a mandate to maximize the return on its investment, defined in terms of emission
reductions. The portfolio as a whole will be required to demonstrate emission reductions within 10 years.
This approach allows a balance between projects with fairly certain, but modest, emission reductions and
projects with higher uncertainty.
The majority of investments will be directed towards projects with a high likelihood of yielding greenhouse
gas emission reductions in the near term, reflecting contributions to the deployment and infrastructure
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
component of the fund. This component of the technology fund could also help finance projects that
would allow technologies that are close to deployment to deliver their full emissions reduction potential.
Projects will cover a broad range of technologies. A portion of investments, particularly from the research
and development component of the fund, will be focused on supporting the creation of transformative
technologies expected to achieve emission reductions in the medium and longer term.
The portfolio as a whole will be built to reflect these broad considerations. In turn, project selection will be
based on a fair and transparent process. For instance, the fund could issue Requests for Proposals
specifying criteria on which project proponents could compete.
For projects close to the deployment end of the technology spectrum, the technology fund may claim
ownership of the emission reductions from a project until its investment has been recovered, with the
number of tonnes required based on the cost of the project.
Rigorous monitoring, verification and reporting requirements will be applied to ensure accountability in the
performance of both projects and the fund as a whole.
Pre-certified investments will have the same contribution rate as the technology fund and will be subject
to equivalent criteria and requirements, including ownership provisions.
To facilitate the implementation of carbon capture and storage in new facilities in the oil sands and coal-
fired electricity sectors, as well as in other sectors that have the potential to make use of such carbon
capture and storage projects, the government will start discussions with industry, as well as the
Governments of Alberta and Saskatchewan, to pre-certify carbon capture and storage projects. The use
of such pre-certified investments will ensure that funds from such sectors as oil and gas will be dedicated
to emission reductions from those sectors.
In addition, because of the significant potential for carbon capture and storage to reduce emissions and in
order to encourage investment in such projects, contributions of up to 100% of a firm's regulatory
obligation in these pre-certified projects will qualify for credits up to 2018. This provision will be limited to
firms that can make direct use of carbon-capture-and-storage technology in the following sectors: oil
sands, electricity, chemicals, fertilizers, and petroleum refining.
The decision to recognize another fund will be the responsibility of the federal government. To ensure a
nationally consistent approach, other funds would be required to fulfill equivalent mandate and criteria as
those governing the technology fund.
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The offset system will therefore encourage all sectors of the economy to reduce emissions.
More details on the design of the offset system are found in the companion document, Turning the
Corner: Canada's Offset System for Greenhouse Gases.7 A general overview of the system is provided
below.
The following principles will guide the design of the offset system.
l Offset projects must achieve emission reductions or removals and should provide a net
environmental benefit.
l Reductions or removals must occur in Canada.
l The system will promote projects in as many sectors and for as many project types as practical.
l The system must be as simple and cost-effective to administer as possible, and the administrative
burden for participants should be minimized.
l The system will build on the experience of Canadian pilot projects and the work of other jurisdictions.
Consideration will be given to recognizing reductions originating in the United States, once the United
States has a regulatory system in place and cross-border emissions trading is feasible. A good example
of emissions that could be covered by such arrangements would be those stored by the Weyburn-Midale
CO2 Project.
To ensure the environmental integrity of the system, it is essential that the reductions or removals from
offset projects are real, incremental, verifiable, and unique.
Because some types of greenhouse gas reduction or removal projects increase emissions of air
pollutants, project proponents may be required to identify and address these negative impacts. The
Government of Canada is committed to reducing emissions of both greenhouse gases and air pollutants,
and such measures will ensure that all air emissions are reduced.
7 Available at www.ec.gc.ca/default.asp?lang=En&n=75038EBC-1.
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Initial design and implementation of the offset system will be undertaken by Environment Canada. This
will allow rapid implementation of the program, as well as accountability for results, through direct
government oversight. During the first 18 months to two years of operation, the government will bear all
initial delivery costs and no initial user fees will be collected.
The private sector will play a substantial role, including developing quantification approaches for project
types for approval by the government, implementing projects, verifying real emission reductions or
removals under federal oversight, and providing infrastructure and services for the trading of credits.
Allowing Clean Development Mechanism credits to be used for compliance will provide additional
flexibility in how firms can comply with the regulations and will enhance market liquidity, reducing
compliance costs. The limit on the use of these credits for compliance purposes will, however, ensure
that the vast majority of emission reductions actually take place in Canada.
There had been some concern that allowing HFC-23 reduction projects to qualify for Clean Development
Mechanism credits would create a perverse incentive to increase the production of HCFC-22, an ozone-
depleting substance. This issue has largely been addressed by the decision reached under the Montreal
Protocol in September 2007 to initiate an accelerated phase-out of HCFCs in developing countries by
2015. In addition, at the December 2007 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
meeting in Bali, it was agreed that the Clean Development Mechanism should not lead to increases in
HCFC-22 production.
All Clean Development Mechanism project credits will be accepted for compliance with the regulations,
with the exception of credits for forest sink projects. Credits from forest sink projects are temporary under
Kyoto Protocol rules. This means that they must be replaced periodically. Including credits from forestry
projects would have added complexity to the domestic system without significantly reducing compliance
costs for regulated industry.
The credit for early action will consist of a one-time 15 Mt allocation of bankable, tradable credits in
recognition of such reductions achieved by firms that will be subject to the proposed regulations in 2010.
These reductions must have been achieved between 1992 and 2006 and be the result of an incremental
process change or facility improvement.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
More details on the eligibility and program requirements for the credit for early action program are found
in the companion document, Turning the Corner: Canada's Credit for Early Action Program8. A general
overview of the program is provided below.
The credit for early action program has been designed using the following principles.
l Simplicity and cost-effectiveness: The program will impose the lowest cost possible on
government and industry that is consistent with the level of rigour needed.
l Fairness: Facilities that wish to have actions considered for recognition will have an equal
opportunity and all applications will undergo the same evaluation process.
l Transparent: The program rules, technical guidance, and approach to making allocation decisions
will be clearly expressed and publicly available to all interested parties.
l Consistency: Decisions on issues such as technical guidance and evaluation of submissions will be
as consistent as possible across sectors.
5.4.1 Eligibility
An action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is eligible for early action recognition if it:
l reduced emissions of one or more of the following six greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide, methane,
nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, or sulphur hexafluoride;
l occurred in a facility that meets one of the facility definitions outlined in Schedules 5 to 14 and 16 to
19 of the December 8, 2007 Notice with respect to reporting information on air pollutants, greenhouse
gases and other substances for the 2006 calendar year and emissions from or the capacity of the
facility exceed the minimum threshold specified in Section 4.2 above;9
l led to initial reductions in 1992 or later and the reductions continued until at least December 31, 2006;
and
l was an "incremental reduction," in the sense of being an emissions reduction resulting from an action
beyond the normal business conditions in place at the time the action was taken.
An action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is not eligible for early action recognition if it was:
l the result of a direct federal, provincial or territorial climate change incentive other than an
Accelerated Capital Cost Allowance;
l part of a standard improvement in line with changes generally occurring in the industry;
8 Available at www.ec.gc.ca/default.asp?lang=En&n=75038EBC-1.
9 Canada Gazette, Part I, Supplement, Vol. 141, no. 49, December 8, 2007, available at canadagazette.gc.ca/partI/2007/
20071208/pdf/g1-14149.pdf
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Clear eligibility criteria for these credits will be established and communicated to all stakeholders prior to
the allocation of the credits. Evidence that eligibility requirements are met must be provided and available
for verification and audit.
As stated in the April 2007 framework, if the reductions that meet the eligibility criteria exceed 15 Mt,
credits will be allocated on a pro rata basis. If the reductions that meet the eligibility criteria are fewer
than 15 Mt, a maximum of one credit per tonne of reductions will be allocated. There will be no pre-
allocation of credits to any particular sector or region. The 5 Mt limit on credits to be used in any given
year will be addressed by issuing 5 Mt of credits in each of the years 2010, 2011, and 2012. Each
allocation of credits to any successful applicant will be divided equally over the three years.
Individual firms that took the early action are responsible for preparing their submissions. In order to
complete a submission, applicants need to establish their baseline, quantify eligible reductions, and
provide evidence to support their claim. Third-party verification of reduction claims will be required. In
order to receive their credits, applicants successful in their claim will be required to establish an account
in the system that will be used to track the ownership of the various units that may be used for
compliance. The intention is to start the application process in spring 2008, with the decision on credit
entitlements being made in summer 2009.
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6. Transition to Fixed
Emission Caps
In the October 2006 Notice of intent to develop and implement regulations and other measures to reduce
air emissions10, the government indicated its intention to move from emission-intensity targets to fixed
emission caps in the 2020-2025 period. The government still intends this transition to take place.
The anchor for the fixed cap will be the national objective of a 20% absolute reduction in greenhouse gas
emissions from 2006 levels by 2020. The level of the cap on industrial emitters will be informed by the
results of the application of the emission-intensity system.
As well, any decision in Canada on the transition to a fixed-cap regime for greenhouse gas emissions
would take into account developments occurring in other countries, especially the United States, with the
aim of establishing a North American emissions trading system once the United States implements a
greenhouse gas regulatory system.
10 Available at canadagazette.gc.ca/partI/2006/20061021/pdf/g1-14042.pdf.
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7. The Economic Impacts of
the Industrial Regulations
This section provides an overview of the likely impact of the regulatory framework for industrial
greenhouse gas emissions on economic growth in Canada. This section does not take into account the
potential economic impacts of future recommendations of the clean electricity task force.
To conduct this analysis, Environment Canada has used its Energy-Emissions-Economy Model for
Canada (E3MC). The model combines the bottom-up, technology-specific Energy 2020 model and the
macroeconomic model from Informetrica Limited. This analysis is based on an updated reference case of
expected “business-as-usual” growth in Canada's greenhouse gas emissions to 2020 compiled by
Environment Canada.
In total, the regulatory framework is expected to achieve approximately 165 Mt in direct and indirect
emission reductions from the industrial sector by 2020; that is, about a 37% reduction from projected
levels or a 21% reduction below 2006 levels. This does not include the additional 25 Mt in targeted
reductions from the electricity sector.
A portion of the costs associated with these investments and changes in operations will be passed on by
the regulated sectors in the form of higher prices, thereby changing the relative price signals to the rest of
the economy in favour of low-emitting investment and consumption choices.
Canadians can therefore expect to bear costs under the regulatory framework that are not trivial. At the
same time, these costs strike an appropriate balance between environmental results and manageable
economic impacts.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
For the majority of individual Canadians and for businesses outside the regulated sectors, these costs will
be most evident in the form of higher energy prices, particular with respect to electricity and natural gas.
However, increased energy conservation and efficiency are expected to limit those increases. The
regulatory framework itself is not expected to have a significant impact on motor fuel prices, due to
international price competitiveness pressures.
Overall, the analysis indicates that the regulatory framework will have a measurable, negative impact on
Canada's real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) level. This impact will begin at relatively marginal levels in
the first five years, but gradually increase out to 2020. The assessment indicates that this impact will not
exceed 0.5% of forecasted real GDP levels in any given year between 2010 and 2020. Real GDP will
thus be modestly affected by the regulatory framework, but will continue to grow at a robust pace.
Some industrial sectors, particularly those that are more carbon-intensive, will be more affected than
others, particularly in the short- and medium-term. Costs for these industries are primarily driven by the
requirement for accelerated investments in more energy-efficient, less carbon-intensive capital and
technologies, with some loss in output possible.
Overall, the regulatory framework results in real, but manageable, economic costs. Most importantly, the
regulatory framework will break the link between greenhouse gas emissions from Canada's industrial
sector and sustained economic growth for these key industries. It also provides the foundation for
Canada to meet its national goal of a 20% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from 2006 levels by
2020. Full details on the modelling assumptions underlying this economic analysis are available in the
technical document "Turning the Corner: Detailed Emissions and Economic Modelling".
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8. Next Steps
The next step is to translate the final regulatory framework for industrial greenhouse gas emissions into
regulatory language for the actual regulations. Work has begun on this, and the draft regulations are
expected to be published in the Canada Gazette, Part I for public comment in fall 2008. The final
regulations relating to industrial greenhouse gas emissions are expected to be approved and published in
the Canada Gazette, Part II in fall 2009, with the greenhouse gas provisions of the regulations coming
into force, as planned, on January 1, 2010.
Amendments to the regulations to include the air pollutant elements will be made once the regulatory
framework for air pollutants has been finalized in spring 2008. In addition, there will be annual reporting
requirements under section 71 of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 until equivalent
regulatory requirements are in force.
The emissions reporting requirements will be part of the regulations and will be developed in consultation
with provinces/territories, industry, and environmental groups. The data will be managed under the Single
Window for Reporting initiative that is now under way at Environment Canada. In addition, procedures for
monitoring the ownership and retirement of compliance units will be developed for the purposes of
compliance verification.
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Annex 1
General consultations
On April 30, May 1 and May 2, 2007, Environment Canada officials held three technical briefings on the
overall regulatory framework for representatives from province and territories, industry, and environmental
and health non-governmental organizations. These consultations were aimed at validating sector-specific
air pollutant targets, including their date of coming into force; finalizing the greenhouse gas regulatory
framework; and addressing the scope of the offset system and governance of the technology fund.
Two multi-stakeholder consultation sessions specifically focusing on the compliance mechanisms were
held in Montreal on May 31 and June 1, 2007 and in Vancouver on June 4 and 5, 2007.
In addition, further in-depth consultations were held, as described below, for the purposes of validating
sector-specific air pollutant targets, including their date of coming into force; finalizing the greenhouse gas
regulatory framework; and addressing the scope of the offset system and governance of the technology
fund.
Provincial/territorial consultations
In-depth consultations on the overall regulatory framework were held with provincial and territorial
representatives on May 22-24, 2007, in Gatineau, Quebec. In addition, a number of bilateral discussions
at the official and ministerial level have taken place with provincial and territorial counterparts.
On an ongoing basis, the federal government and provincial and territorial governments agreed that the
Environmental Protection and Planning Committee of the Canadian Council of Ministers of the
Environment would serve as the main federal-provincial/territorial forum in which to discuss the regulatory
framework.
The Environmental Protection and Planning Committee has met four times to discuss the framework, and
has had two conference calls. In addition, working groups were set up to provide provincial and territorial
input into the elements of the regulatory framework.
The Canadian Environmental Protection Act National Advisory Committee was briefed on the regulatory
framework twice, once in June and once in December 2007.
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Turning the Corner: Regulatory Framework for Industrial Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Industry consultations
Environment Canada officials met several times with companies and associations in their respective
industry sectors. Overall, around 120 meetings were held with industry on the greenhouse gas and other
elements of the regulatory framework between May and November 2007.11
Aboriginal consultations
At the end of November and early December 2007, a series of three meetings on the regulatory
framework were held with three Aboriginal groups: the Assembly of First Nations, the Congress of
Aboriginal Peoples, and Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami.
Ministerial consultations
During May, June, September, and October 2007, ministers met with chief executive officers and other
senior-level executives from the key sectors that will be regulated to discuss the proposed regulatory
framework and to listen to industry's views on the framework.
11 The meetings in May to August also included the validation of the air pollutant targets that were in the April 2007 Regulatory
Framework for Air Emissions.
26