Gas Companies in Canada Fake Sustainability Numbers

They used the fake erroneous to score a pipeline expansion.

Behind a wetland, an oil refinery dominates the sky. It is made of mostly white metal and many smokey pillars.

The Enbridge Terminal and Pipelines next to the Suncor Energy Refinery in Sherwood Park. Artur Widak/AP

This story was originally published by Canada’s National Observer and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Gas companies in two of Canada’s largest provinces are relying on reports with erroneous numbers and deleted information that make natural gas appear more sustainable and cost-effective than it actually is as they race to lock in fossil fuel infrastructure for decades.

Canada’s National Observer reported a supposedly independent, third-party report that Enbridge—Ontario’s gas utility—commissioned to argue for natural gas contains data that erroneously inflated the cost of switching from natural gas to electricity for home heating. The company has cited the inaccurate information to try to convince the utility commission and the public to let it expand natural gas pipe capacity in the province.

The findings came on the heels of the revelation last week by Glacier Media that FortisBC, BC’s gas utility, demanded a report be altered to remove information that noted heat pumps and electricity are more efficient ways to decarbonize. The company also instructed the report’s authors to remove a section stating Vancouver’s municipal ban on natural gas in new buildings should be introduced province-wide.

The documents are the latest salvo in an ongoing fight by Canada’s natural gas industry to dominate the country’s energy market and push aside more efficient and sustainable eclectic methods for heating buildings and cooking. Researchers are clear that to tackle the climate crisis, we must drastically curb the use of fossil fuels—including natural gas.

“This is a crucial public debate about how municipalities are going to regulate natural gas and electricity, and it’s pretty clear that if you’re serious about climate, electricity is far preferable,” said Calvin Sandborn, senior counsel at the University of Victoria’s Environmental Law Clinic.

“What’s at stake here is the current investment in infrastructure that (could) tie us to fossil fuel use for decades right in the middle of a climate emergency.”

This issue is on full display in the FortisBC report. Commissioned from two environmental consultancy groups by FortisBC with the BC government and the BC Bioenergy Network, the document was first publicly circulated on March 3, 2023. That version contained key passages that praised the efficacy of heat pumps over gas in decarbonizing the province.

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