Alex Sadvari
Partner
National Co-Lead – BioEnergy Group (Canada)
Article
10
The long-awaited final Clean Fuel Regulations (the "Regulations"), developed by Environment and Climate Change Canada ("ECCC") under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 ("CEPA"), were registered on, and are in force as of, June 21, 2022.[1] They were published in the Canada Gazette II on July 6, 2022.[2]
The Regulations include a number of significant changes since the previously published draft (we wrote about the previous draft here). Most notably, only gasoline and diesel have an annual reduction requirement under the final version of the Regulations, not all liquid fossil fuels as previously proposed.
ECCC has also increased the stringency of the carbon intensity (CI) limits in the final Regulations. The Regulations now require a 3.5 gCO2e/MJ reduction in carbon intensity from 2016 baseline levels in 2023, increasing to a 14 gCO2e/MJ reduction in carbon intensity by 2030. ECCC has advised that it will not update the carbon intensity limits before 2030 in order to provide certainty to investors and primary suppliers planning for compliance.[3]
The first carbon intensity reduction requirement now takes effect on July 1, 2023, rather than on Dec. 1, 2022 as originally proposed. This will provide for approximately 12 months of early credit creation.
The final Regulations broaden the types of low carbon intensity fuels that are eligible to meet the two per cent volumetric requirement for diesel beyond biodiesel and hydrogenation derived renewable diesel (HDRD), to all fuels suitable to be used as a diesel replacement.
The final Regulations also amend Compliance Category 1, actions throughout the lifecycle of a fossil fuel that reduce its carbon intensity, to permit credit creation for actions that reduce the carbon intensity of a liquid fossil fuel through GHG emission reduction projects only. ECCC will not provide credits for GHG reduction projects that reduce the lifecycle carbon intensity of gaseous or solid fuels. However, ECCC can allow Category 1 credit creation for projects outside of Canada.
The Credit and Tracking System ("CATS") is a credit trading system administered by ECCC to facilitate the acquisition of credits and create market opportunities for the deployment of low carbon intensity fuels.
Primary suppliers (gasoline and diesel producers and importers), credit creators, foreign suppliers and carbon intensity contributors can register online now through the CATS website. Once registered, parties can start applying for recognition of CO2 emission-reduction projects and start creating compliance credits.
All primary suppliers have been given 90 days within which to register. That means that even if a primary supplier imports 400 m3 or more of gasoline or diesel within the first 45 days of the Regulations, they still have until Sept. 18, 2022 to submit a registration report to ECCC. After that initial 90-day period, primary suppliers have 45 days within which to submit a registration report after the day on which they produced in, or imported into Canada, 400 m3 or more of gasoline or diesel during a compliance period.[4]
A primary supplier's annual carbon intensity reduction requirement can be met through three main categories of credit-creating actions:
Participants in the credit trading system include primary suppliers and voluntary credit creators. These participants can create, own, transfer and acquire credits through one or more of the three categories above.
Please contact Gowling WLG with any questions about the Regulations, CATS registration and credit creation opportunities.
[1] The Regulations were registered on June 21, 2022. The Privy Council issue date for the Order in Council is June 20, 2022 (Registration SOR/2022-140 June 21, 2022; P.C. 2022-704 June 20, 2022).
[2] They came into force on the day that they were registered, i.e., June 21, 2022 (Regulations, s. 176(1)).
[3] For carbon intensity limits see the Regulations, section 5(1): TABLE: Fuel Carbon-Intensity Limits.
[4] Regulations, s. 10 (1).
[5] Regulations, s. 175: "The Renewable Fuels Regulations are repealed"; s. 176(2) "Sections…175 come into force on September 30, 2024."
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