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Alberta renewables report contradicts government proposals for industry, critics say

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FILE - Farmland is seen with solar panels from Cypress Creek Renewables, Thursday, Oct. 28, 2021, in Thurmont, Md. A new study released on Wednesday, April 13, 2022, finds that if the nations of the world live up to their promises, future climate climate change can be limited to the weaker of two international goals. According to a study, the world is potentially on track to keep global warming at or a shade below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) hotter than pre-industrial times, a goal that once seemed out of reach. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

Critics are asking why the Alberta government’s proposed regulations on renewable power seem to have ignored the conclusions of its own utilities regulator.

Sarah Elmeligi, Opposition New Democrat environment critic, points out the governing United Conservatives had in hand a report from the Alberta Utilities Commission by the end of January.

That report, released yesterday, concludes renewables pose little threat to Alberta’s agriculture or environment and that concerns can be largely addressed with existing rules.

Those conclusions are in sharp contrast to the rules the government proposed in February that would limit renewables on good farmland, erect a buffer zone around protected areas and create new rules to ensure cleanup.

Elmeligi says those measures don’t line up with what the government was hearing from its own advisers.

She says the mismatch is hypocritical, given that the possible conditions for renewables aren’t imposed on other industries.