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It’s time for the oil and gas industry to pay for climate pollution

Federal Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland should include a windfall tax when she delivers her government's budget today. Photo by Adam Scotti/PMO

These days, the financial news section features glowing reviews of the oil and gas industry’s quarterly profits. Meanwhile, in the current events section, we see the affordability crisis being discussed, and in breaking news, we will soon see headlines announcing another intense wildfire season and the heartbreaking consequences of climate disasters.

Let’s connect the dots between these news stories. Fossil fuels are the leading cause of climate change. Climate change increases the frequency and severity of extreme weather events, like droughts and last year’s devastating wildfire season. Climate scientists and forestry professionals have repeatedly explained that increased unseasonable dryness from climate change leads to fires that burn hotter, longer and more easily — and spread faster. This has huge costs and consequences.

In 2023, Canada’s oil and gas companies’ cost to society from their pollution was estimated at $52 billion. These calculations were made using the Canadian government's social cost of greenhouse gas emissions analysis.

Given the costs of climate change, and the exorbitant profits of those peddling the literal fuel to the fire, shouldn’t the oil and gas industry pay its fair share of the damage?

In 2023, four of the top oil companies in Canada (Cenovus, Imperial Oil, Suncor and Canadian Natural Resources) had a combined annual profit of over $25 billion. While that is less than the record-breaking 2022 profits of $33.7 billion, it is still the second most profitable year in the history of the oilpatch.

The federal government should include a windfall tax on #OilAndGas companies when it delivers #Budget2024 and use those funds to increase government #ClimateAction, writes @EmBelliveau @envirodefence #cdnpoli #ClimateChange #EmissionsCap

Cenovus, Imperial Oil, Canadian Natural Resources and Suncor are part of a growing choir of fossil fuel industry advocates who claim that they are now willing to tackle the climate crisis. In advertising campaigns, they position themselves as your friendly neighbourhood good-guy energy providers. Surely then, they must be investing heavily in emissions reductions and diversifying their business to provide clean energy for customers. That's what a good energy provider would do.

But that isn’t the case. Our review of the annual reports of these four companies indicates they collectively spent over $16 billion last year to expand oil and gas extraction, thereby increasing their contribution to climate change. Suncor even sold off its wind and solar assets for a gain of $302 million at the start of 2023 and cut 1,500 jobs while paying the new CEO Rich Kruger $36.8 million in his first year.

Given that these companies are doubling down on oil and gas expansion, rather than reinvesting even a small margin of their profits in real climate solutions, the federal government should include a windfall tax when it delivers its budget today and use those funds to increase government climate action.

It’s not too late for the government to ensure that the fossil fuel industry pays its fair share. A windfall tax on oil and gas companies, similar to the ones in Europe and the U.K., would help rein in their excessive profits and could help deliver climate solutions that need financial support from the government. Analysis from the Parliamentary Budget Office estimated that applying the Canada Recovery Dividend to oil and gas profits in 2022 would have generated $4.2 billion in one year alone. Isn’t it time the polluters actually paid for the mess they make?

If Canada were to truly embrace urgent and necessary climate action, the taxed funds could be directed at realistic and scalable climate solutions. These include community-led renewable energy, upgrading our electricity grids, ending energy poverty through direct support for home energy efficiency upgrades and deep retrofits, and committing to reliable operating funding for public transit. As Canadians struggle with the affordability crisis, implementing these kinds of climate solutions can lift financial burdens while enhancing community resilience.

“Canada tackles the climate crisis by making polluters pay their fair share” — now that’s the headline we want to see in all sections of Canada’s newspapers.

Emilia Belliveau has worked on climate and environmental justice issues since 2012 as a community organizer, academic researcher, campaigner with environmental non-profits and as a policy analyst in the British Columbia Ministry of Energy. Before joining Environmental Defence, she worked with remote First Nations in B.C. to accelerate the transition off diesel with community-led renewable energy projects and energy efficiency. Emilia holds a master’s degree from the University of Victoria (UVic). At UVic, she was involved with the Corporate Mapping Project, which investigated how corporate power is organized and exercised by the fossil fuel industry.

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