Saskatchewan Releases Emissions-reduction Regulations

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MLT Aikins LLP
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MLT Aikins LLP is a full-service law firm of more than 270 lawyers with a deep commitment to Western Canada and an understanding of this market’s unique legal and business landscapes.
Saskatchewan has released regulations aimed at curbing industrial emissions after the federal government agreed to remove the province from the federal output-based pricing system (OBPS).
Canada Environment
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Saskatchewan has released regulations aimed at curbing industrial emissions after the federal government agreed to remove the province from the federal output-based pricing system (OBPS).

The OBPS imposes a tax on large emitters when they exceed caps on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The national carbon pollution price schedule will see industrial emitters pay $65 per tonne of excess emissions in 2023 – an amount that will rise to $170 per tonne by the year 2030.

Last year, the federal government agreed to remove Saskatchewan from the federal OBPS after the province presented its own plan to reduce emissions aligned with the federal carbon pricing benchmark. This plan will ensure industrial carbon taxes remain in Saskatchewan.

Saskatchewan has now released the Management and Reduction of Greenhouse Gases (Standards and Compliance) Regulations, 2023, detailing how the province's emissions reduction plan will work, including compliance obligations for regulated emitters.

The province plans to incentivize investments in clean technology through grants issued by the Saskatchewan Technology Fund, which will provide funding for qualifying projects that aim to mitigate, sequester or capture GHG emissions.

Now that Saskatchewan has released regulations aimed at curbing industrial emissions, the next step is for the federal government to officially remove the province from the federal OBPS regime.

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Saskatchewan Releases Emissions-reduction Regulations

Canada Environment
Contributor
MLT Aikins LLP is a full-service law firm of more than 270 lawyers with a deep commitment to Western Canada and an understanding of this market’s unique legal and business landscapes.
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