Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Dec, 2014 10:58 AM

    OTTAWA — Canadian investments in clean energy totalled $6.5 billion last year, a 45 per cent increase from 2012, according to a new study released Tuesday.

    More than half the Canadian investment — $3.6 billion — went into wind power, with another $2.5 billion invested in the solar sector, says Clean Energy Canada, an advocacy and research organization.

    The investment spike moved Canada up to seventh place among the Group of 20 industrialized nations, from 12th spot a year earlier.

    "We hear a lot of talk about pipelines and the oil and gas sector," Merran Smith, the director of Clean Energy Canada, said in an interview.

    "What we don't hear is that Canada's actually gone from a boutique clean energy industry to really big business."

    Over the past five years, $24 billion has been invested in clean energy, and the sector now accounts for almost 24,000 direct jobs, a total that includes manufacturing but not construction employment.

    The report comes as Canadian officials begin two weeks of meetings in Lima, Peru, on the United Nations framework convention on climate change.

    Greenhouse gas emissions are rising again in Canada, according to Environment Canada projections, and the country will not come close to meeting its 2020 international target for curbing emissions under the 2009 Copenhagen accord. The talks in Lima are part of negotiations for a post-2020 international agreement that is supposed to be completed next December.

    The UN talks were given a jolt of adrenalin last month when the United States and China, the world's two biggest emitters, announced a bilateral deal to curb emissions through 2030.

    Both the Chinese and U.S. governments are investing heavily in renewables.

    "There's a clean energy transition underway globally already, and they're backing their clean energy industries," said Smith.

    What makes the Canadian investment story more compelling is that it's happening without much federal government interest.

    Private sector financiers — many from abroad — and provincial governments are driving the investment boom.

    Of the top five financiers of clean energy in Canada over the past five years, investing $3.44 billion among them, two are Japanese, two are German and just one is Canadian, says the study.

    Clean Energy Canada would like to see a federal industrial policy, based on tax and research incentives, like the one that helped Canada's aerospace and oil sands industries in their infancy.

    "If the federal government got engaged we could be a real world leader in clean energy," said Smith. "But the federal government is really missing in action."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CBC, NHL websites briefly affected by Syrian Electronic Army hack

    CBC, NHL websites briefly affected by Syrian Electronic Army hack
    TORONTO — A group of politically motivated hackers operating under the name the Syrian Electronic Army briefly defaced the websites of the CBC, the NHL and a number of other prominent news outlets on Thursday.

    CBC, NHL websites briefly affected by Syrian Electronic Army hack

    Liberals Use Legislature To Set Stage For LNG, But Still No Deals

    Liberals Use Legislature To Set Stage For LNG, But Still No Deals
    VICTORIA — The stage has been set for the development of a liquefied natural gas industry by British Columbia's Liberal government, even though the first of what it says are 18 potential deals has yet to come to fruition.

    Liberals Use Legislature To Set Stage For LNG, But Still No Deals

    Advocates for sexual assault victims encouraged by Ghomeshi charges

    Advocates for sexual assault victims encouraged by Ghomeshi charges
    TORONTO — The sexual assault charges filed against former CBC Radio host Jian Ghomeshi offer tentative hope to those who fear their claims will be dismissed by an indifferent law enforcement system, victims' advocates said Wednesday.

    Advocates for sexual assault victims encouraged by Ghomeshi charges

    U.S. Ebola vaccine looks protective but may require high dose: study

    U.S. Ebola vaccine looks protective but may require high dose: study
    TORONTO — A single dose of a U.S.-designed Ebola vaccine may be protective against the disease, a new study suggests. But the research also appears to indicate that dose will have to be relatively large, which may present problems for the vaccine.

    U.S. Ebola vaccine looks protective but may require high dose: study

    1 In 3 Canadians Relying Strictly On Online Shopping For Holiday Gifts

    1 In 3 Canadians Relying Strictly On Online Shopping For Holiday Gifts
    TORONTO — A growing number of Canadians plan to do all of their holiday shopping online this year to avoid stepping foot in maddening malls, suggests a new survey commissioned by Google.

    1 In 3 Canadians Relying Strictly On Online Shopping For Holiday Gifts

    Mall shooter lied about fears to justify cold-blooded killing, prosecutor says

    Mall shooter lied about fears to justify cold-blooded killing, prosecutor says
    TORONTO — The man accused of a terrifying, deadly attack in a crowded downtown mall concocted a story about living in terror as a way to justify what was a cold-blooded killing, his first-degree murder trial heard Wednesday.

    Mall shooter lied about fears to justify cold-blooded killing, prosecutor says