Times Colonist

Energy transition plan aims to create jobs

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — The Liberal government’s long-promised plan to transition Canada’s labour force to respond to climate change says a clean energy economy will not prompt massive unemployme­nt in the country’s energy towns.

It says if Canada plays its cards right, the clean energy economy will create so many jobs there may not be enough workers to fill them. But some of it will require the traditiona­l oil and gas sectors to “aggressive­ly” lower the greenhouse gas emissions produced as the fuels are extracted.

“According to numerous studies, rather than a shortage of jobs, in Canada we are much more likely to see an abundance of sustainabl­e jobs with a shortage of workers required to fill them,” reads the plan published Friday by the federal government.

The 32-page “Sustainabl­e Jobs Plan” comes more than three years after the federal Liberals promised a road map that will protect jobs as Canada adjusts from a combustion-energy powerhouse to a clean-energy economy.

While lacking many specifics, it outlines in broad terms the ways the federal government will help maintain and create energy jobs, as well as transfer workers to net-zero jobs as needed. It includes a new government office to oversee the process, training programs, Indigenous consultati­on and inclusion and better data to fully understand the jobs that exist now and that could exist in the future.

The promise of job creation mirrors comments made in January by the Pathways Alliance, a consortium of six oilsands companies working to find ways to curb their production emissions, including through large-scale carbon capture and storage systems.

In a roundtable interview with The Canadian Press on Jan. 16, Cenovus CEO Alex Pourbaix said the industry’s investment­s to decarboniz­e production will “create a boom in the oil-producing provinces that is equivalent to what happened in the ’80s and the ’90s.” Pathways estimates that will create 35,000 new jobs.

The report’s name alone, however, signals the political quicksand it lands on, after accusation­s from Alberta in recent weeks that the federal government intends to impose a “just transition” plan on the province that will wipe out the energy sector entirely.

While the term “just transition” is the internatio­nal standard used to describe ensuring the protection of workers during economic changes, critics including Alberta Premier Danielle Smith seized on it as evidence the Liberals plan to shut down her province’s energy industry.

Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson has said for months he prefers the term “sustainabl­e jobs” because it is more accurate.

Smith has appeared more open to the notion of a “sustainabl­e jobs” strategy but her skepticism at the Liberals’ intentions remains high.

Just one day before the plan was released, Smith wrote again to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asking him to put the whole thing on ice because it poses “an unconstitu­tional and existentia­l threat to the Alberta economy and the jobs of hundreds of thousands of Albertans.”

Trudeau and Smith met Feb. 7 in Ottawa, where they discussed ways to co-operate on clean energy, including Alberta’s willingnes­s to provide more government aid for oil producers to install carbon capture and storage systems. But she said in her letter Thursday that scrapping the jobs transition plan was a “non-negotiable condition” of Alberta doing that.

In a statement Friday, Smith said she would contact Ottawa soon to discuss issues she has with the rebranded plan, including its failure to recognize Alberta’s right to develop its own natural resources and manage its workforce.

“Implementi­ng a federal plan of this magnitude in areas of exclusive provincial jurisdicti­on doesn’t merely require piecemeal ‘discussion­s’ with the provinces, it requires outright provincial approval and co-operation,” Smith said.

Friday’s report goes out of its way to try and debunk accusation­s the clean energy economy is an attempt to phase out Canada’s oil and gas industry completely.

It says global demand for oil will be down 75 per cent by 2050, and demand for gas about half of what it is today. But it says oil and gas will be needed for noncombust­ion uses, including in plastics, solvents, lubricants and waxes.

Canada can still have a vibrant, if smaller, oil and gas industry by 2050 but only with effort to make production­related emissions “ultralow.”

“It is in this context that aggressive­ly lowering emissions from the production of fossil fuels, in line with Canada’s climate commitment­s, is both a competitiv­e advantage and a source of sustainabl­e jobs,” the report said.

It also said while many people will need training for the jobs emerging in clean energy and battery production, some jobs in the oilpatch already come with the skills needed for things like hydrogen production and biofuel developmen­t.

 ?? JEFF McINTOSH, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An oil drilling rig operates surrounded by canola and hay fields near Cremona, Alta.
JEFF McINTOSH, THE CANADIAN PRESS An oil drilling rig operates surrounded by canola and hay fields near Cremona, Alta.

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