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Feds announce plan to reduce methane emissions from oil sector, landfills
New federal rules set phased methane emission cuts starting 2028 with flexible compliance; expected to reduce emissions by 304 million tonnes and save enough gas to heat 11 million homes.
- On Dec. 16, 2025, the federal government announced new regulations to cut methane emissions from the oil and gas sector and landfills, marking its first added climate policy.
- With a high short-term warming effect, methane has more than 80 times the impact of carbon dioxide, mostly from fossil fuel extraction and production and flaring, wasting fuel that could heat over 11 million Canadian homes.
- The regulations require that operators ban venting and follow inspection schedules, offering two compliance options including methane-intensity thresholds, while landfill owners and operators must monitor and capture methane emissions.
- Government analysis shows the rules will cut 304 million tonnes from oil and gas and 100 million tonnes from landfills, costing roughly $14-billion and funding technologies with nearly $16-million.
- After industry pushback, the new regulations, part of the Climate Competitiveness Strategy, are projected to reduce oil and gas production growth by 0.2 per cent between 2025 and 2035, building on 2018 rules.
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Ottawa Introduces Regulations to Lower Methane Emissions by 75 Percent
The Liberal government has introduced regulations aiming to reduce Canada’s methane emissions by 75 percent from 2014 levels by 2035. “Clear, predictable regulations give industry certainty, attract investment, and ensure Canadian energy remains competitive in a world that is moving towards lower carbon production,” Environment and Climate Change Minister Julie Dabrusin told reporters on Dec. 16. The new rules are more lenient than what was prev…
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Total News Sources21
Leaning Left10Leaning Right2Center6Last UpdatedBias Distribution56% Left
Bias Distribution
- 56% of the sources lean Left
56% Left
L 56%
C 33%
11%
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