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Carney will visit Calgary this Friday to announce a deal on industrial carbon pricing, sources claim

A source from the Alberta government and an industry insider with knowledge of this plan said on Wednesday that Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney would 'visit' Calgary on Friday in order to announce details about a new agreement with Alberta regarding industrial carbon pricing.

A third source familiar with the deal said that Canada and Alberta, its largest oil-producing province, are close to a deal which will increase the cost of credit in the industrial carbon market of the province to C$130 per metric ton by the year 2040. The Globe and Mail reported the credit cost and date agreed upon on Wednesday.

Alberta frozen?its headline carbon price for industrial use in May 2025. Credits on its market are currently trading between C$20 to C$40 per metric ton. Experts say this is too low for polluters to be motivated to invest in technology to reduce emissions.

Sources who weren't authorized to reveal the plans said Carney would visit the oil and gas?city, for the first since November when he agreed with Premier Danielle Smith to work together in order to boost investment in energy production.

The sources said he ?will announce the new industrial carbon pricing plan, aimed at strengthening Alberta's pollution pricing regime while also clearing the path for Alberta's plan to propose a one-million-barrel-per-day crude oil pipeline to British Columbia's northwest coast.

Third source: The agreement will include escalating price floors for carbon to ensure Canada's large emitters continue to be incentivised to reduce their emissions each year. Source: The agreement will see Alberta's carbon headline price increase to $100 a metric ton by next year, compared to the current $95 a metric ton. It will then rise to $130 per ton in 2030, and then escalate 1.5% each year beginning in 2036.

The Prime Minister's Office did not confirm that the visit had taken place.

Environmentalists want Alberta's carbon credit market price to reach C$130 in 2030 and not?2040. They have claimed that a shorter timeframe would encourage companies make immediate efforts to lower their emissions.

Alberta and the oil and natural gas industry have been lobbying to delay the implementation date. They argue that a carbon price regime which puts Canada's oil sands industry at a disadvantage will slow down the growth of oil sands production at a time when the country wants to increase its energy exports while reducing its dependence on the U.S.

The federal government said that?its approval for a new pipeline is dependent on Canadian oil companies investing in emission reductions through carbon 'capture technology.

Adam Waterous, the executive chair of Canada’s fifth largest oil company, Strathcona Resources told reporters on Wednesday that companies would not invest in pipelines until the government lifted an existing ban on oil tanks off Canada’s northwest coast, and addressed other barriers. Reporting by Amanda Stephenson, Calgary; Editing and production by Aurora Ellis and David Gregorio

(source: Reuters)