What will the carbon price cost the oilsands? A Timbit per barrel, one analysis says
The industrial carbon price will cost Alberta’s oilsands producers on average the equivalent of about a Timbit per barrel of oil, according to a climate think tank’s new analysis intended to serve as a reality check on provincial-federal pipeline talks.
The analysis published by the Canadian Climate Institute indicates oilsands producers will pay an average of about 50 cents per oil barrel, if the minimum carbon price rises to $130 per tonne. That’s compared to about nine cents per barrel in today’s market, the institute says.
The $130 price is the target laid out in the recent Ottawa-Alberta memorandum deal to explore a new export oil pipeline.
The calculator is intended to “interject some reality” into those talks as a deadline approaches for the two sides to come to a carbon pricing agreement, said the institute’s executive vice-president Dale Beugin.


