The could result in $48 billion to $103 billion in cumulative federal government national accounts-based deficits over 11 years (2030 to 2040), according to numbers derived from the Conference Board of Canada’s to Alberta Treasury Board and Finance.
In my analysis, I examined the impact of the proposed federal oil and gas emissions cap based on a reference or business as usual (BAU) case (no oil and gas emissions cap) and three oil and gas emissions cap scenarios: a 45 percent methane reduction scenario, a 60 percent methane reduction scenario, and a 75 percent methane reduction scenario, all developed by the .
Under the reference or BAU case, without the application of the proposed oil and gas emissions cap, the federal government’s cumulative national account surplus between 2030 and 2040 is $25.7 billion.
Under the 75 percent methane reduction proposed oil and gas emissions cap scenario, the federal government experiences cumulative national account deficits totalling $47.7 billion between 2030 and 2040, a negative $73.4 billion change in the government’s fiscal position from the reference or BAU case.
Under the 60 percent methane reduction proposed oil and gas emissions cap scenario, the federal government experiences cumulative national account deficits totalling $76.7 billion between 2030 and 2040, a negative $102.4 billion change in the government’s fiscal position from the reference or BAU case.
And under the 45 percent methane reduction proposed oil and gas emissions cap scenario, the federal government experiences cumulative national account deficits totalling $102.6 billion between 2030 and 2040, a negative $128.3 billion change in the government’s fiscal position, from the reference or BAU case.
While there is widespread recognition that the proposed federal oil and gas emissions cap hurts the Alberta economy, the harm done to the rest of the Canadian economy and the federal government’s own fiscal position is less well known. Cumulative national account-based federal deficits resulting from the application of the oil and gas emissions cap could add up to $48 billion to $103 billion to Canada’s debt for 2028/29) between 2030 and 2040, increasing debt servicing costs (estimated at .
In light of these disturbing deficit and debt numbers, the federal government has a responsibility to immediately release its of the proposed oil and gas emissions on the Canadian and provincial economies and their finances.
Lennie Kaplan spent over two decades in the public service of Alberta, including as a senior manager in the fiscal and economic policy division of the Ministry of Treasury Board and Finance, where he worked on cross-ministry initiatives evaluating the fiscal and economic impacts of federal climate change policies. He retired from the province’s Canadian Energy Centre at the end of October 2023.
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