Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Harper calls oil and gas regs 'crazy economic policy' in times of cheap oil

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Dec, 2014 12:22 PM

    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper has definitively slammed the door on regulating Canada's oil and gas sector, calling it a "crazy, crazy" economic policy under current global oil prices.

    His comments in the House of Commons come as international talks are underway in Lima, Peru, in an effort to reach a new post-2020 global agreement on curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

    Harper was emphatic that Canada will not move unilaterally to curb fast-rising emissions from Alberta's oilsands.

    The Conservative government has been promising to regulate the oil and gas sector since 2007 as part of its sector-by-sector approach to curbing emissions, an approach the government called a Made-in-Canada plan.

    Harper was responding to questions about Canada's poor record in meeting its previous Copenhagen emissions targets, which a government report this week showed are far off track.

    The Environment Canada emissions report shows that increasing GHG emissions from the oil and gas sector — principally the oilsands — will almost completely offset major reductions in the electricity sector by the year 2020.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    More Than 300 Snakes Found In Saskatchewan Home, Some Slithering Off To School

    More Than 300 Snakes Found In Saskatchewan Home, Some Slithering Off To School
    A Saskatchewan family has captured more slithering snakes in their home. And some of the serpents are going to school.

    More Than 300 Snakes Found In Saskatchewan Home, Some Slithering Off To School

    Man Charged With Murder In Lobster Dispute Told Police He Intended To Kill Him

    Man Charged With Murder In Lobster Dispute Told Police He Intended To Kill Him
    PORT HAWKESBURY, N.S. — A man accused of murdering another man at sea in a dispute over lobster told police he intended to kill Phillip Boudreau when he shot at him in a Cape Breton harbour.

    Man Charged With Murder In Lobster Dispute Told Police He Intended To Kill Him

    TransCanada Cuts Ties With U.S. Public Relations Firm Over Campaign Concerns

    TransCanada Cuts Ties With U.S. Public Relations Firm Over Campaign Concerns
    A Canadian pipeline company is cutting its ties with a controversial U.S. public relations firm after leaked documents raised concerns about suggested tactics to promote a planned pipeline. 

    TransCanada Cuts Ties With U.S. Public Relations Firm Over Campaign Concerns

    BC Physiotherapist Convicted Of Sexually Assaulting 8 Women

    BC Physiotherapist Convicted Of Sexually Assaulting 8 Women
    DUNCAN, B.C. — A physiotherapist from central Vancouver Island's Cowichan Valley has been convicted of sexually assaulting eight women.

    BC Physiotherapist Convicted Of Sexually Assaulting 8 Women

    Ferguson Ruling Sparks Protest In Toronto

    Ferguson Ruling Sparks Protest In Toronto
    TORONTO - Thousands braved freezing temperatures in Toronto on Tuesday night to hold a vigil for Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager slain by a white police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August.

    Ferguson Ruling Sparks Protest In Toronto

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info
    TORONTO - The Canada Revenue Agency confirmed late Tuesday that it has accidentally disclosed confidential taxpayer information to the CBC. 

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info