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Liberals set plan to phase out coal by 2030, with flexibility for Nova Scotia

Last Updated Nov 21, 2016 at 8:27 am MDT

Catherine McKenna, Federal Minister of Environment and Climate Change, speaks at the CanWEA conference in Calgary, Alta., Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2016.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

The Liberal government is moving to phase out the use of coal-fired electricity in Canada by 2030 as part of its overall clean-energy strategy.

The goal is to make sure 90 per cent of Canada’s electricity comes from sustainable sources by that time up from 80 per cent now, Environment Minister Catherine McKenna said Monday.

Coal power in Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia accounts for 10 per cent of Canada’s total greenhouse gas emissions.

Under the federal plan, provinces can choose to completely phase out coal entirely, and replace it with lower-emitting sources _ such as Alberta is doing _ or they can use carbon capture and storage technology, McKenna said.

The move is expected to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than five megatonnes by 2030 _ the equivalent of taking 1.3 million cars off the road. This is in addition to the 10 megatonnes that Alberta’s early phaseout of coal represents.

The timetable includes an agreement with Nova Scotia to give that province the flexibility it needs to shift directly from fossil fuels to cleaner sources of electricity, rather than switching to natural gas in the interim. McKenna is working on an agreement with Saskatchewan.

The announcement is one of a series of measures the federal government is rolling out in advance of a first-ministers meeting with the provinces in early December to determine a broader climate-change plan.

“Tackling climate (change) is both a challenge and a huge opportunity,” McKenna told a news conference Monday. “This opportunity will attract the investments required to build the clean-energy economy that will position Canada for great success in generations to come.”

McKenna said Canada is blessed with an abundance of hydro, wind and solar opportunities and 80 per cent of Canada’s electricity already comes from non-emitting sources.

“This has already positioned us as a global leader. We can always do better, though.”

France, Britain, the Netherlands, Austria and Denmark have all announced accelerated coal phaseouts, she noted.