11/27/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/27/2025 16:40
(OTTAWA, ON) The Canadian federal and Alberta governments announced a Memorandum of Understanding today to develop the energy sector. Among other measures, the MOU pledges to "Enter into a methane equivalency agreement on or before April 1, 2026, with a 2035 target date and a 75% reduction target relative to 2014 emissions levels."
Groups who are concerned about the climate and health impacts of methane pollution issued the following statement:
At a time when we need to move faster on climate, it is disappointing to see Canada tapping the brakes.
Oil and gas is responsible for the largest share of Canada's emissions, and it is the industry whose emissions are rising fastest. Methane is the least expensive and easiest way to reduce these emissions at scale. It is extremely disappointing to see that Canada is failing to harvest the lowest-hanging fruit.
What's more, this unnecessary delay will lead to more wasted energy that already totals over $2 billion since the federal methane target was announced, as well as potentially threaten the creation of tens of thousands of jobs in the growing methane mitigation industry.
In 2021, the federal Liberals promised a 75% reduction in oil and gas methane by 2030. After four years of delay in passing the regulation, the government is now proposing yet another five years of delay for its implementation.
It is five years we can't afford to waste, given the dramatic increase in climate-related impacts such as wildfires, floods and drought, as well as an ever-widening gap between what Canada is doing to address climate change and its fair share of the GHG reductions needed.
Background
After 10 years of global leadership on oil and gas methane, this is Canada's first major climb down on its efforts to control this pollutant that's responsible for 30% of emissions that are causing the climate crisis.
The MOU means the federal government is failing to keep up with other jurisdictions on many fronts:
Delaying methane regulations will stall the many economic benefits that methane reductions produce.