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.
New methane regulations have also been separately introduced for landfills, which Dabrusin said account for 17 percent of Canada’s methane emissions. Methane from food, yard waste, and paper products must now be monitored and captured in some cases, and Dabrusin said landfill regulations are expected to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 100 million tonnes between 2026 and 2040.
Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) said the regulations will be phased in at the start of 2028, and will “spur investments to reduce methane emissions that will help position the Canadian oil and gas industry amongst top performers for producing low-methane intensity products.”
ECCC said the oil and gas sector’s production is expected to grow by more than 17 percent from 2019 to 2030 with the methane regulations in effect. The regulations will reduce oil and gas production by 0.2 percent from 2025 to 2035, and reduce Canada’s GDP by 0.01 percent during the same timeframe.
The regulations are expected to remove 304 megatonnes of carbon dioxide from 2028 to 2040, and cost oil and gas companies an average of $48 per tonne of CO2 reduced, which ECCC said is “one of the lowest cost opportunities to drive significant progress on our climate goals.” ECCC also said the net benefits of the regulations are expected to be $23.9 billion over the 2028 to 2040 period from “avoided climate change impacts and by cutting air pollutant emissions” that negatively impact Canadians’ health.
Alberta and Saskatchewan had previously opposed the federal government’s methane emissions cap, with Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe saying in 2023 that the cap and other measures “will have serious economic impacts on Canadians and limit our sustainable Canadian energy products from providing heat and electricity to the world.”







