Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Green's Call For Ban On Foreign Oil Imports, Using Alberta Oil Instead

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 May, 2019 05:36 PM

    OTTAWA — Green party Leader Elizabeth May says saving the world from climate change requires Canada to get off oil before the middle of the century.


    In the meantime, she wants Canada off foreign oil as soon as possible.


    The promise to make Canada energy independent is — perhaps unexpectedly — in line with the economic and climate strategy of Conservative leader Andrew Scheer.


    Scheer's plan calls for Canada to import no foreign oil by 2030, partly by planning an energy corridor across Canada that could simplify the construction of pipelines able to move Alberta oil to any coast. He sees it as a way to find additional domestic markets for Canada's oilsands, in a bid to increase their production.


    May's plan, to "turn off the taps to oil imports" is only a stop-gap measure to keep foreign oil out until Canada can break its oil habit altogether.


    By 2050, May wants bitumen to be used in Canada only by the petrochemical industry for plastics, rubber, paint, and other such products.


    "As long as we are using fossil fuels we should be using our fossil fuels," said May.


    May's climate plan is likely to get more scrutiny than its predecessors in past elections.


    The Liberals and NDP already proved they are paying close attention to the rising threat of Green support, with both pushing similar motions to declare climate change an emergency in the House of Commons earlier this month. Both motions were tabled less than a week after the Greens elected a second MP in a Vancouver Island byelection, and not long after a provincial wing of the party formed the official opposition in Prince Edward Island.


    May said she's perfectly fine with Green popularity pushing other parties to raise their games on climate. While both the Liberals and NDP claimed their motions had been in the works before the byelection result, May said there is no doubt in her mind that Paul Manly's winning and the NDP and Liberals finishing distantly third and fourth, "had almost everything to do with" the motions.


    The NDP motion failed because it called for Canada to drop plans to expand the Trans Mountain pipeline, a pipeline May also opposes. The Liberal motion hasn't yet gone to a vote.


    The Green climate plan also calls for Canada to double its cuts to greenhouse-gas emissions by 2030 and get emissions to zero by 2050. That plan includes no longer selling combustion-engine cars after 2030 and replacing all existing combustion-engine vehicles by 2040.


    Canada imports about a million barrels of oil a day and produces four times that much. In 2017, Canada produced 4.2 million barrels of oil, and exported 3.3 million of those. Domestic refineries handled 1.8 million barrels.


    Canada's oil producers already pump enough product to meet domestic demand but there are two problems: there is no pipeline from the oil-rich west to refineries in the east, and even if there were, those refineries aren't equipped to handle the heavier bitumen that is the Alberta oilsands' trademark.


    For Canadian refineries in the east, bitumen from the oilsands must be upgraded to synthetic crude. May's plan is to invest in upgraders to do it.


    She acknowledges weaning Canada off foreign oil won't happen overnight, given existing contracts Canadian refineries have and figuring out how to build the upgraders and then ship the product.


    Privately, Liberal government critics suggest there is no way to have Canada's east coast use Canadian oil without building a new pipeline to get the products there. May does not support a new pipeline anywhere, and argues the raw bitumen could be transferred by rail as long as Canada invests more in its rail services.


    The proposed Energy East pipeline to carry diluted bitumen to the east coast fell apart in 2017 amid significant opposition in Quebec, opposition that continues under the new Coalition Avenir Quebec government.


    Scheer's plan is to establish an energy corridor that would allow an Energy East-like pipeline to proceed alongside interprovincial electricity grids, with only one right-of-way required.


    May said the Greens are the "only party that have a plan that allows human civilization to survive."


    "It's not a Canadian lifestyle choice," she said. "All of humanity is at risk."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Prince Edward Island Woman Facing Third Charge Of Infanticide: Police

    Prince Edward Island Woman Facing Third Charge Of Infanticide: Police
    CHARLOTTETOWN — A Prince Edward Island woman who admitted to causing the deaths of two infants is now facing a third charge of infanticide.

    Prince Edward Island Woman Facing Third Charge Of Infanticide: Police

    Calgary Police Say Bodies Of Missing Mother And Daughter Found

    Police say they have found the bodies of a Calgary woman and her toddler daughter who disappeared last month. Investigators say a suspect, who was earlier questioned in the case, has been taken into custody and charges are pending.  

    Calgary Police Say Bodies Of Missing Mother And Daughter Found

    Indian Exchange Student Drowns In Kamloops River, RCMP Recover Body

    Kamloops RCMP say the body of a 23-year-old Indian exchange student has been recovered after the man was swept away in the North Thompson River on Friday morning.

    Indian Exchange Student Drowns In Kamloops River, RCMP Recover Body

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'
    But reading from a prepared statement, Darshan Kang also maintains that neither his intention nor his actions were improper.

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver
    The Squamish Nation councillor, who also goes by the name Dustin Rivers, is standing on a pinched triangle of reserve land near the city's centre that the First Nation won back in 2002 after decades of legal battles.

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver

    Systemic Change Needed To Address Suicide Among Physicians In Canada: Doctors

    Tulk, who completed her residency in family medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton saw a system that was failing resilient people wired to succeed through hard work and a competitive drive — before they became victims of burnout.

    Systemic Change Needed To Address Suicide Among Physicians In Canada: Doctors