Fund new technology to curb climate change: oil executive

New technology, not "punitive measures," is the best
way to help oil and gas companies in Canada reduce
pollution, an Alberta oil executive told a special
legislative committee on Tuesday.
Gordon Lambert, vice-president, sustainable
development for Suncor Energy Inc., said the federal
government should set up a new technology fund to
help oil and gas companies develop innovative ways
to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.
"We do have a significant dilemma before us," he
told a special legislative committee studying Bill
C-30, Canada's Clean Air Act, in Ottawa.
"On the one hand, we want abundant clean energy.
On the other other, we want to protect the
environment. The only way to square that circle is
through new technology.
"We are looking for all kinds of policies and
partnerships with government to enable us to get
there. What's going to work is not punitive measures,
but collaborative efforts."
He said new technology includes what is known as
carbon capture, in which carbon dioxide is taken out
of emissions and stored instead of being released into
the atmosphere.
It also includes geological sequestration, in which the
carbon dioxide is injected directly into underground
geological formations.
Lambert, a witness who appeared before the
committee, said the danger with regulations,
especially if steep targets are imposed without much
notice, is that they would erode confidence,
prompting investors to "exit the industry" and take
their capital elsewhere.
Lambert told the committee that it costs $20 to $30 to
produce a barrel of oil in Alberta, whereas it costs $2
to $3 to produce a barrel of oil in Saudi Arabia.
Francis Scarpaleggia, a Quebec Liberal MP on the
committee, said that he was lukewarm to the idea of a
technology fund and that there is real need for
immediate targets instead of more consultation with
industry groups. He said the previous Liberal
government consulted the industry already.
"I get the sense that we are into avoidance," he said.
"The message I hear from a lot of industry sectors is
leave us alone. It's like we can't do anything unless
we are giving you money to develop new
technology."
Matthew Bramley, director of climate change for the
Pembina Institute, told the committee that the
government needs a "climate change plan," not a
single bill to address the huge problem of greenhouse
gas emissions.
"I'm certainly troubled that the federal government
does not have a comprehensive plan," he said. "A
climate change plan would have to be simply more
than a bill."
Targets needed to force emissions cuts: Bramley
Bramley said strict regulations in the form of targets
are needed to force industry into cutting emissions of
greenhouse gases and aggressively pursuing new
technology to comply with the law.
He said Bill C-30 is a "series of technical
amendments" to a number of laws, not an overall
plan.
"We need targets that are easily understandable by
anyone. If we set absolute targets, it should be clear
that what those are and what those mean," he said.
The proposed legislation, designed to deal with
greenhouse gas emissions and air pollutants, sets
absolute targets for reduction of greenhouse gas
emissions at between 45 and 65 per cent lower than
2003 levels by 2050.
The bill passed first reading in the House of
Commons on Oct. 19, 2006. The committee is
studying the bill and hearing from witnesses before it
reworks it.
Michael Cleland, president of the Canadian Gas
Association, told the committee that the government
needs to develop policy that would push the industry
"in the right direction in a steady gradual way" to
avoid a "sharp shock" to investors.
The government also needs to look at the demand
side of oil and gas production, Cleland said. It should
try to reduce demand by bringing in policies to
transform Canadian communities over the next 50
years to make them more energy efficient, he said.
Nathan Cullen, an NDP MP from B.C. on the
committee, said: "When I hear the testimony today, it
sounds like we have the luxury of time."



-- 
Darryl McMahon
It's your planet.  If you won't look after it, who will?

The Emperor's New Hydrogen Economy (now in print and eBook)
http://www.econogics.com/TENHE/

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