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Saskatchewan blasts new emissions regulations

Green reform or federal overreach?
Oil pumps
Saskatchewan reacts quickly to proposed methane regulations, saying the move amounts to an energy sector production cap.

REGINA — Today, the federal government released draft regulations that would force a 75 per cent reduction in methane emissions on Saskatchewan's oil and gas sector.

In a press release the provincial government says this amounts to a production cap by default and is another instance of federal overreach and changing goalposts. It also violates the current equivalency agreement, which Saskatchewan signed with the federal government in 2020, the release states

Between 2019 and 2022, Saskatchewan achieved a more than 60 per cent reduction in greenhouse gases, including methane, from upstream oil facilities under its Methane Action Plan (MAP). This plan, which was previously accepted by the federal government in 2020, aims to reduce methane emissions by 40 to 45 per cent from 2015 levels by 2025.

"These continually changing rules lead to investor uncertainty and allow countries with far less stable regulatory regimes to dominate the energy space," Justice Minister and Attorney General Bronwyn Eyre said.  

"This latest unilateral federal action on methane targets specific provincial industries and infringes on our exclusive provincial jurisdiction over natural resources. In response, we will consider all possible options, including a referral to the Saskatchewan First Economic Impact Assessment Tribunal."

"This change will result in lower production, reduced provincial revenues, and a lower standard of living for all people in Saskatchewan," Energy and Resources Minister Jim Reiter said. "This is another example of federal overreach into areas of exclusive provincial jurisdiction."

This latest federal proposal comes amid growing momentum in favour of provincial rights, including the Supreme Court's recent decision on the federal Impact Assessment Act (Bill C-69) and the Federal Court's recent decision on plastics, according to the press release.

In addition, in the Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, 2021 SCC 11 case, in paragraph 175, Chief Justice Wagner clearly stated that Parliament does not have the power to regulate greenhouse gas emissions generally or emissions from specific sectors.

As confirmed in The Saskatchewan First Act, which came into force on Sept. 15, 2023, Saskatchewan has exclusive legislative jurisdiction, under Section 92A of the Constitution Act, 1867, over the exploration of non-renewable natural resources, which includes the exclusive authority to regulate the greenhouse gas emissions from the oil and gas sector.

In a paper published in 2018, Dr. Joule Bergerson of the University of Calgary reported that if other oil and gas producing nations regulated their energy sectors like Saskatchewan, particularly around methane, global, energy-produced greenhouse gas emissions would fall by 25 per cent.

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