The federal government is considering restricting billions of dollars in tax credits and grants for electricity projects to provinces that commit to the 2035 target for an emissions-free electricity grid.
The federal budget already made clear the restriction would be in place for the new refundable 15 per cent clean electricity investment tax credit, which is for investments in non-emitting electricity production, storage and interprovincial transmission.
But there are several other new investment tax credits for hydrogen production, clean technology and carbon capture and storage systems, worth tens of billions over the next 12 years. There is also at least $3 billion in grants for renewable electricity projects and technology upgrades to make the grid more efficient, and the federal government has promised to consider helping fund transmission lines inside provinces in certain situations.
A new document released Tuesday by Energy Minister Jonathan Wilkinson and Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault leaves the door opened to making provinces commit to the 2035 non-emitting electricity grid deadline to access those as well, at least for their applications to electricity projects.
“We certainly are considering that,” Wilkinson confirmed to The Canadian Press in an interview.
“But there is obviously consultation that’s going on with respect to the investment tax credits. We want to hear from people. We also want to think about if we’re going to put those kinds of constraints or strings on those things, how we best do that.”
The option could be the latest political grenade in the federal-provincial relationship when it comes to environmental matters.
The 2035 clean-power target will be enshrined in regulations, and Guilbeault is expected to publish the first draft of those rules as early as this week. They will spell out, for example, a timeline for natural gas power plants to be closed or fitted with carbon-capturing systems.
Committing to a net-zero electricity grid is an easy move for six of the provinces, which are already more than 90 per cent of the way there. They have to make a lot more power but they don’t have to replace most of the power they already produce.
For the other four — Alberta, Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick — coal and natural gas still supply between 30 per cent and 85 per cent of their power. That makes a clean grid by 2035 a much steeper challenge — so much so that Alberta and Saskatchewan have simply said they can’t do it.
“We will not attempt the impossible when it comes to power production in our province,” Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said in May.
“We will not risk plunging our homes, our schools, our hospitals, our special care homes, our businesses into the cold and darkness because of the ideological whims of others.”
Both provinces have said they are instead targeting a non-emitting grid by 2050. That’s the year Canada is also aiming to be net-zero emissions, which means any greenhouse gas emissions that are still produced are captured by nature or technology.
Aiming for net-zero electricity earlier is key because it unlocks the potential to decarbonize many other industries down the road. Electric vehicles, for example, are only non-emitting if the power used to charge their batteries comes from non-emitting sources.
Wilkinson said he’s not trying to draw a line in the sand but said there has to be some connection between the billions of dollars on offer and progress toward Canada’s goals.
“You know, my style is not to have big fights,” he said. “I actually like to listen to what people and provinces have to say and to try to figure out a pathway through which we can accomplish the goals that we all want to achieve.”
He also said the disagreement isn’t about whether to build non-emitting electricity. It’s about how fast to do it.
“The gap that exists between us is not about whether we should have a non-emitting grid, it’s about whether we get there by 2035 or somewhere a little bit later,” he said.
Wilkinson commended Alberta for doing what he said was the most of any province to expand its solar power production. The province is also well ahead of schedule on retiring or converting its coal-fired electricity generators, he noted. The last one will be converted before the end of this year.
Premier Danielle Smith, however, announced last week the province was pausing approvals of new large wind and solar power projects for six months while it addresses concerns about the effect on farmland, scenery, reliability and eventually, cleaning up the projects at the end of their life.
Wilkinson said he is taking Alberta “at its word” that the pause is just to ensure everything is being done properly in the face of faster-than-expected growth, particularly in solar power.
He also said he thinks there is already a good conversation happening with Alberta, and he is convinced an agreement between the two governments is possible.