Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Biofuels are expensive policy, report says

A study released Tuesday by Canada's Ecofiscal Commission finds that ethanol and biodiesel policies cost consumers and governments about $640 million a year, but only reduce greenhouse gas emissions by about three million tonnes.

That works out to at least $180 per tonne for ethanol and least $128 per tonne for biodiesel.

And even those estimates may severely under-represent the true cost per tonne of carbon dioxide reductions when the full life cycle emissions of biofuels are taken into account, the report says.

The report comes a day after the federal Liberal government announced it would impose on provinces and territories a mandatory carbon price of $10 a tonne starting in 2018, increasing to $50 a tonne in 2022, if those jurisdictions refuse to adopt their own carbon price or cap-and-trade plan.

The cross-partisan, privately funded Ecofiscal Commission has been making the case for two years that broad-based carbon taxes are the most efficient and least economically damaging way to reduce Canada's carbon footprint.