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surround and mood convert government minister Julie Dabrusin is pushing plump for against claims from Steven Guilbeault, who resigned from cabinet this week over Ottawaâs memorandum of understanding with Alberta and said Canada is dismantling several pieces of its climate plan.
The MOU â which paves a potential pathway for a new oil and gas pipeline to British Columbia long desired by Alberta â includes a commitment by Ottawa to not implement its oil and gas emissions cap and to suspend its clean electricity regulations in Alberta pending a new carbon pricing agreement.
Guilbeault â who was environment minister under former prime minister Justin Trudeau before being named Canadian identity and culture minister by Prime Minister Mark Carney â expressed concern about the fate of those policies in a statement announcing his resignation, adding that the measures âremain essential to our climate action plan."
Dabrusin said the MOU language around the clean electricity regulations is not a carveout. Instead, it allows her to negotiate with provinces, and they can demonstrate theyâll meet the objectives of the regulations in their own way.
Guilbeault resigns from cabinet after Carney, Smith sign energy deal
When asked by host Rosemary Barton if sheâs been given assurances Alberta will be able to meet the objectives, Dabrusin said the province will need to âmeet the goal if weâre going to reach an agreement."
According to the MOU, Canada and Alberta have set a deadline of April 1, 2026, to come to a carbon-pricing equivalency agreement and a methane equivalency agreement.
The MOU includes a provision that Canada and Alberta âalso agree to engage meaningfully with Indigenous Peoples in both Alberta and British Columbia on this project, with the involvement of the B.C. Government for engagement with B.C. First Nations."
Maureen Nyce, the elected chief councillor of the Haisla Nation in B.Câs North Coast, told Barton that she sees âa lot of barriers that will prevent this pipeline.â
âI think itâs going to be a very hard sell to British Columbia, to First Nations people,â Nyce said. She added that undoing the emissions cap and âbasically undermining the Fisheries Act and the Species at Risk Actâ will be met with a lot of resistance.
âIf Canada gets this done, I will be gobsmacked if they can pull this off,â Nyce said. ÂAnd by the time they get this off the ground, I donât think theyâll be able to sell any oil because nobodyâs going to be buying it.â
B.C. Minister of Energy and Climate Solutions Adrian Dix told Barton that âin our view, the pipeline continues to be as marginal a project as it ever was. What weâre concerned about, obviously, is the amount of time and attention thatâs taken."
Dix said his province will continue to have conversations about the pipeline, âbut there ainât no project right now. So letâs focus on the real. And in B.C., that is building and leading the Canadian economic renaissance with real projects.â
The MOU makes it clear a key goal is the "one or more private sector constructed and financed pipelinesâ with Indigenous people's co-ownership and a route that increases export access to Asian markets.
Paul Colborne, president and CEO of Calgary-based Surge Energy, told Barton he expects âseveral companies to come out and make a bid on this opportunity.â
Carney gets a standing ovation in Calgary after signing energy MOU
âI think thereâs a sense of âweâre open for business,â and we have amazing regulatory protections for the environment, for producing oil and gas [and] for pipelines,â he said.
Colborne added that there needs to be balance in terms of energy production and hitting emission targets. He said while the balance âswung too far one way over the last nine years," now itâs moving to a place where foreign capital is in play.
Alberta Minister of Energy Brian Jean told Barton his province âabsolutelyâ needs to secure a private sector proponent, adding the agreement is âa great news story for everybody involved."
âThis is about co-operative Confederation and making sure that Canada works as one country, and this is a clear indication that it does,â Jean said.
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