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The Price of Certainty: TIER Emitters Await Canada-Alberta's MOU

Written by Scott Kincaid | Mar 27, 2026 7:15:39 PM

As the April 1st, 2026, deadline for finalizing the Canada-Alberta Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) approaches, the regulatory landscape is characterized by a period of waiting. Despite regulatory headlines making progress, market skepticism remains over whether tangible policy alignment will materialize by the impending federal deadline. While stakeholders have long advocated for consistent carbon pricing policies, a shift in tone has emerged among industry leaders. At the center of this tension is the argument that Canada’s complex regulatory environment acts as a deterrent to the foreign capital necessary for developing energy infrastructure. For Alberta’s premier Danielle Smith, and supporters in the oil and gas sector, the core issue remains a perceived lack of regulatory reciprocity. This highlights the disconnect between escalating carbon costs and the slow pace of permitting large-scale abatement infrastructure. A prominent instance of this infrastructure gap is the Pathway Alliance’s proposed carbon capture pipeline. As a cornerstone of the sector’s long-term decarbonization roadmap, its status in the regulatory process is often cited as an indicator of the complexity within regulatory approvals.

A flurry of recent announcements, however, suggest that progress towards a carbon pricing equivalency agreement may be taking shape. On March 6th, the federal and provincial governments reached a draft agreement to move toward a “one project, one review” system for environmental impact assessments, intended to accelerate regulatory timelines which often hinder capital-intensive projects. This was followed by the most recent Agreement in Principle on Methane Equivalency, posted on March 25th, serving as a technical proof that both provincial and federal governments can align on emissions reporting standards. While these agreements are not yet finalized, they represent a concerted effort to demonstrate that climate ambition can be paired with high-growth industrial capabilities, provided administrative hurdles are lowered.

The linchpin of these negotiations remains the regulatory updates to Alberta’s Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction (TIER) program. While the federal benchmark review progresses, Alberta serves as a provincial flagship for what aligning regional programs with the federally mandated minimum effective credit price of CAD 130/tonne could look like. For Alberta’s high-emissive industries, this move is seen as a strategic pivot to maintain provincial control over TIER market revenues. By pursuing an agreement through the MOU, Alberta seeks to retain the flexibility and autonomy over how revenue collected from carbon pricing can be re-invested into industry. This ensures that the TIER system continues to function as a tool for regional industrial support, maintaining a clear provincial focus while operating in perceived alignment with the federal backstop.

What this Means for the Market: From Anticipation to Neutrality

The eventual resolution of the Alberta MOU carries significant weight for the integrity of Canada’s broader carbon market architecture. A successful synchronization of TIER with federal stringency would establish a national blueprint for industrial equivalency. Still, with only days before the April 1st deadline, sentiment within the TIER market has cooled. Where optimism once fueled brisk credit trading, following the initial MOU announcement in late 2025, participants are now largely in holding patterns. The “stroke-of-the-pen” risk, often referred to as the market impact a single government decision can have, has returned and dampened market activity.

With several key pillars of the MOU still under negotiation, market sentiment remains in a neutral, “wait-and-see” stance. Many participants appear inclined to hold their positions until the regulatory fine print is confirmed, with this pattern of holding best summarized in the following quote from the March 25th announcement:


“Canada and Alberta continue to make good progress on all the elements of the MOU. This work will extend over the coming weeks to ensure it is done right. Both governments are focused on moving forward as quickly as possible to provide certainty.”

 

For now, this assurance has done little to shift market sentiment. With negotiations continuing, most stakeholders view progress as genuine, but incomplete. Until equivalency arrangements are finalized and reflected in text, neutrality rather than bullishness is likely to remain the prevailing tone for Alberta’s TIER participants. Even as the June 30th, 2026, compliance deadline for the 2025 compliance year looms closer.

ClearBlue is actively monitoring these developments, for more information about ClearBlue’s advisory services or market intelligence coverage, please contact us.