加拿大特鲁多敦促艾伯塔省为碳捕获激励措施做出贡献

加拿大总理贾斯汀·特鲁多在谈到主要产油省艾伯塔省时表示:“我认为有盈余的省份可以发挥作用,有能力投资于他们的未来和工人的未来。”

史蒂夫谢勒,路透社

加拿大总理贾斯汀·特鲁多 (Justin Trudeau) 1 月 6 日敦促主要产油省阿尔伯塔省政府利用其预算盈余来帮助加强税收抵免,以帮助扩大碳捕获和储存并减少排放。

美国去年通过了《通货膨胀削减法案》,其中包括为在那里发展碳捕集、利用和封存(CCUS)提供大量税收抵免,加拿大石油和天然气行业一直在寻求增加四月份联邦预算中承诺的金额。

特鲁多在接受路透社采访时表示:“一段时间以来,我们看到阿尔伯塔省在投资与气候变化相关的任何事情上都犹豫不决。但 CCUS 是这些有形的东西之一。”

他在 2023 年首次接受媒体采访时表示:“我认为拥有盈余的省份可以发挥作用,有能力投资于自己的未来和工人的未来。”

在此之前,路透社十月份的独家报道援引消息人士的话称,联邦政府与阿尔伯塔省政府在谁应该支付加强碳捕集税收抵免的费用方面存在分歧。

加拿大拥有世界第三大石油储量和第五大天然气生产国,该行业表示需要更多政府回扣来帮助扩大该技术的规模。

碳捕获和储存正在成为全球应对碳污染和气候变化的关键。加拿大石油和天然气行业希望有一个公平的竞争环境,因为渥太华的目标是到 2050 年实现净零排放,这与美国总统乔·拜登设定的目标相同。

艾伯塔省新任总理丹妮尔·史密斯(Danielle Smith)通过了一项法律,允许该省修改其不喜欢的联邦法律,并且她威胁要在被视为对该省能源行业构成潜在威胁的立法中使用该法律。

加拿大表示,今年将出台立法,帮助石油和天然气行业的工人获得培训和其他支持,以便从事绿色能源工作。史密斯于 1 月 5 日表示,她反对这项立法,因为它将“关闭我们的能源行业”。

特鲁多说:“挑战之一是艾伯塔省的一个政治阶层已经决定,任何与气候变化有关的事情都会对他们或艾伯塔省不利。”

“这并不是要打击后卫行动,让我们回到 1980 年代,而是要确保艾伯塔省和许多加拿大人在能源领域资源方面的专业知识继续具有相关性和必要性。”

史密斯办公室在一封电子邮件中表示,去年阿尔伯塔省已向 CCUS 投资或承诺超过 18 亿加元(13.4 亿美元),并批准了 25 项碳储存中心提案。

总理办公室表示:“我们知道,如果没有 CCUS,加拿大、阿尔伯塔省或全球任何地方都无法实现净零排放,我们希望 CCUS 能够帮助我们经济所有部门实现脱碳。”

在采访中,特鲁多还指责他的主要竞争对手、保守党领袖皮埃尔·波利耶夫将加拿大描述为“破碎的”。

特鲁多表示,波利耶夫“不是在提出解决方案”,而是“试图引发一定程度的政治愤怒,但这种愤怒毫无结果,正如我们过去几年在美国所看到的那样。”

普利耶夫的办公室没有立即回应这些评论。民意调查显示,普利耶夫去年上任后,保守党在全国民意调查中略微领先于特鲁多领导的自由党。

原文链接/hartenergy

Canada's Trudeau Urges Alberta to Contribute to Carbon Capture Incentives

"I think there's a role for provinces with surpluses, with the capacity to be investing in their future and their workers future," Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said of main oil-producing province Alberta.

Steve Scherer, Reuters

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Jan. 6 urged the government of the main oil-producing province of Alberta to use its budget surplus to help bolster tax credits meant to help scale up carbon capture and storage and reduce emissions.

After the United States passed the Inflation Reduction Act last year, which included massive tax credits to develop carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) there, the Canadian oil and gas industry has been seeking an increase to what was promised in the April federal budget.

"We've seen for a while Alberta hesitating around investing in anything related to climate change. But CCUS is one of those tangible things," Trudeau told Reuters in an interview.

"I think there's a role for provinces with surpluses, with the capacity to be investing in their future and their workers future," he said in his first media interview of 2023.

The comments follow a Reuters exclusive story from October that cited sources saying the federal government was at odds with Alberta's government over who should pay to bolster tax credits for carbon capture.

Canada is home to the world's third-largest oil reserves and is the fifth-biggest producer of natural gas, and the industry says it needs more government rebates to help scale up the technology.

Carbon capture and storage is emerging as a key plank in the fight against carbon pollution and climate change around the world. The Canadian oil and gas industry wants a level playing field as Ottawa targets net zero emissions by 2050, the same goal set by U.S. President Joe Biden.

Alberta's new premier, Danielle Smith, has passed a law allowing the province to amend federal laws it dislikes, and she has threatened to use it on legislation seen as a potential threat to the province's energy industry.

Canada has said it will introduce legislation this year that will help workers in the oil and gas sector get training and other support in order to move into green energy jobs. Smith on Jan. 5 said she opposes the legislation because it will "shut down our energy industry".

"One of the challenges is there is a political class in Alberta that has decided that anything to do with climate change is going to be bad for them or for Alberta," Trudeau said.

"It's not about fighting a rearguard action to bring us back to the 1980s it's about making sure that the expertise that Albertans and so many Canadians have in resources in the energy sector continue to be relevant and needed."

Alberta has already invested or committed more than C$1.8 billion ($1.34 billion) into CCUS and approved 25 proposals for carbon storage hubs in the last year, Smith's office said in an email.

"We know that there is no path to net zero in Canada, Alberta, or anywhere globally without CCUS, and we are looking to CCUS to assist in the de-carbonizing of all sectors of our economy," the premier's office said.

In the interview, Trudeau also took aim at his main rival, Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre, for casting Canada as "broken."

Trudeau said Poilievre is "not proposing solutions," but is instead "trying to harvest a level of political anger that leads nowhere, as unfortunately we saw in the United States over the past years."

Poilievre's office had no immediate response to the comments. Polls show that the Conservatives took a slight lead over Trudeau's Liberals in national polling after Poilievre took over last year.