Canada and Alberta’s recent agreement-in-principle on methane equivalency sets a 75% reduction target in oil and gas methane emissions by 2035, relative to 2014 levels.1 It could prove to be consequential for the country’s climate ambitions: methane has roughly 80 times the warming impact of CO₂ over a 20-year period and accounts for nearly a quarter of the sector’s total greenhouse gas emissions, making it one of the lowest-cost, highest-impact levers for near-term climate progress.
For oil and gas producers, methane emissions measurement and performance now has greater flexibility on implementation but brings verification to the forefront.
In many instances, things are already up and running among oil and gas operators as several key methane emissions abatement technologies are well established, including:
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Vapour recovery units that capture gas from storage tanks that would otherwise be vented;
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Low-bleed pneumatic devices that eliminate routine methane releases from instruments controlling valves and pumps;
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Compressor seal replacements that prevent leaks from pressurized equipment;
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Leak detection and repair programs that use optical gas imaging and continuous monitors to find and tackle fugitive emissions.
Collectively, these technologies could reduce emissions by more than three million tonnes per year, representing roughly 1% of Alberta’s annual emissions.2
The province has deployed them at scale. Alberta has invested $172 million in methane reduction technology since 2019, including the installation of more than 58,000 low- or no-bleed devices. The outcomes are tangible: government-funded programs have prevented an estimated 17 million tonnes of emissions from being released, according to the Alberta government. A $25-million implementation program helped 49 operators deploy equipment across more than 650 sites at abatement costs below $50 per tonne.3
Canada’s broader methane mitigation sector has grown to more than 130 firms, with compliance actions under the enhanced regulations projected to generate 34,000 jobs from 2027 to 2040.
However, the progress is not without its headwinds. Alberta had frozen the TIER Fund credit price at $95 per tonne in May 2025, well below the federal trajectory to $170, citing U.S. tariff pressures.4 The MoU commits both governments to a minimum effective price of $130 per tonne, but days after signing, Alberta introduced amendments that flooded the credit market.
The measurement gap
While the agreement is promising, success depends on transparent verification, particularly given that a multi-year aerial campaign found Western Canadian oil and gas methane emissions were nearly twice official inventories.5 Canada acknowledged this when it updated its methodology, resulting in a more than 35% increase in reported fugitive emissions.6 The agreement’s commitment to independent third-party assessment may prove its most consequential element.
How Canada compares to its peers
Norway has the world’s lowest methane intensity thanks to a flaring ban dating back to 1971, but its oil and gas sector is a fraction of Canada’s scale.7 The IEA’s Global Methane Tracker 2025 places Canada’s upstream intensity at approximately 0.40 kg methane/GJ, below the global average of 0.55 kg methane/GJ and well ahead of Russia, Iran, and Turkmenistan, but higher than Norway and Saudi Arabia.8
The EU’s Methane Regulation, the world’s first legally binding standard, will require importers to report methane intensity from 2028 and meet maximum intensity thresholds by 2030, connecting low-methane performance with market access, potentially creating an advantage for producers that can compete on methane intensity.9
Private capital is tracking the signal. One recent example is Montreal-based GHGSat, which raised $47 million in September 2025, bringing total financing to $173 million, backed by Canadian entities Yaletown Partners, BDC Capital, and National Bank.10 The company now operates 16 methane-detecting satellites and has partnered with ExxonMobil and Aramco.
What’s next
A draft equivalency agreement is expected for 60-day public consultation later this year. The signals point toward a tightening global methane regime: EU import standards by 2030; Japan and South Korea seeking lower-carbon gas supply; and the Global Methane Pledge, endorsed by 159 countries.
Vivan Sorab is RBC Thought Leadership’s Clean Tech Lead
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