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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Leyland Cecco in Toronto

Canada oil and gas firms to drill 8% more wells next year as emissions target slips

A pipe yard servicing government-owned oil pipeline operator Trans Mountain is seen in Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada, in 2021.
A pipe yard servicing government-owned oil pipeline operator Trans Mountain is seen in Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada, in 2021. Photograph: Jennifer Gauthier/Reuters

Oil and gas producers say they will drill 8% more wells in Canada next year as they look to take advantage of new shipping options, including a controversial government-owned pipeline.

Amid forecasts that Canada is not on target to reach its emissions reductions goals, on Friday the Canadian Association of Energy Contractors (CAOEC) predicted nearly 500 more wells next year, to 6,229 projects.

The news comes as Canada, the world’s fourth-largest oil producer, weighs a possible emissions cap on the country’s oil and gas sector. The environment minister, Steven Guilbeault, has said his government hopes to draft a proposal before the Cop28 climate conference, which begins in Dubai next week. The fossil fuel industry argues the proposed caps are too restrictive.

Despite its ambitious climate commitments, Canada is expected to miss its goal of cutting carbon emissions by at least 40% below 2005 levels by 2030, in part because of emissions from the oil and gas sector. A recent audit found the only significant emissions reductions came during the 2008 financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic.

“Canada is the only G7 country that has not achieved any emissions reductions since 1990,” Jerry DeMarco, commissioner of the environment and sustainable development, told reporters earlier this month.

CAOEC said one of the catalysts for the new drilling projects was the imminent opening of new pipelines, including the delayed Trans Mountain expansion project.

The federal government bought the embattled TransMountain project from Kinder Morgan in 2018 for C$4.5bn (US$3.3bn), with the prime minister arguing Canada needed to alleviate a crude-oil transportation bottleneck that costs Canadian oil producers billions annually in forgone export revenue. He also pledged to use dividends from the pipeline to invest in green energy projects.

In the years since, however, the Canadian government has plowed more than C$35bn into the project, which has become an infrastructure boondoggle marred by cost overruns and delays.

“We know there is zero room to expand oil and gas extraction and meet climate targets,” said Conor Curtis of the Sierra Club Canada Foundation. “If the same effort that has been put into Trans Mountain were instead redirected to renewables, Canadians would be much better off.

“No matter which side of the debate on further oil and gas expansion they fall into, a large majority of Canadians now want to see a strong regulation of emissions from our oil and gas sector that matches Canada’s national emissions reduction targets.”

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