Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Most Premiers Attending Meeting On Climate Change In Quebec City

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 11:31 AM
    QUEBEC — Most of Canada's provincial and territorial premiers are meeting to discuss climate change, a day after Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne announced her province is joining Quebec and California in a cap-and-trade system.
     
    Today's get-together in Quebec City includes all leaders except British Columbia's Christy Clark, Alberta's Jim Prentice, Nova Scotia's Stephen McNeil and Prince Edward Island's Wade MacLauchlan.
     
    Those four provinces are represented by other officials.
     
    The country's premiers agreed last year to plot out a national strategy on energy and climate policy in the absence of federal leadership.
     
    The Conservative government, which ran on a platform in 2008 that included a cap-and-trade policy, argues that any effort to price carbon is an economy killer.
     
    A report last week from a blue-chip panel of economists asserted carbon pricing is the most efficient and effective way to meet Canada's carbon-reduction goals — and that provincial governments were best situated to design their own programs.
     
    Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard was asked before today's meeting began whether the provinces should do more to pressure Ottawa to act on climate change.
     
    "It's not the provinces, it's the population, the population demands that action should be taken," he replied.
     
    "The only way forward to Paris (a worldwide conference on climate change this coming December) is consultation and collaboration. The provinces' actions need to be quantifiable.
     
    "The objective of the day is to allow each province and territory to tell Canadians this is our situation, this is what we want to do, this is what we are doing, this is what we plan on doing."
     
    Couillard said he understands why Prentice is not at the meeting.
     
    "I know Jim Prentice is very serious about this issue," he said. "After the (May 5 Alberta) election, I'm sure we'll do some great work with him, or whoever is the next premier of Alberta."
     
    Paul Kovacs, executive-director of the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction at Western University, said climate change is having a profound impact on the country.
     
    "The scientific literature indicates that the main impact on Canada of climate change is that it will be warmer, wetter and stormier," he said after addressing the meeting. "Regional implications of climate change include permafrost thaw in the north, wildfires in many parts of the country, coastal erosion and droughts.
     
    "The idea of Canada's leaders coming together and coming with a plan to address climate change is incredibly important. Today is an important step in that direction."
     
    Quebec Environment Minister David Heurtel bemoaned the federal government's approach to the topic.
     
    "We're still waiting for a partnership with Ottawa," he said. "We've sent many different types of messages to Ottawa to sit down and work on this issue.
     
    "We're still waiting for a response."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Medical Community Skeptical About Ontario's Move To Regulate Homeopaths

    Medical Community Skeptical About Ontario's Move To Regulate Homeopaths
    TORONTO — Ontario's move to regulate the field of homeopathy in a way similar to how it governs doctors and nurses, making it the first province to do so, is being greeted with skepticism from some in the medical and scientific community.

    Medical Community Skeptical About Ontario's Move To Regulate Homeopaths

    Wallin Expensed Private, Business Trips To Toronto And Guelph, RCMP Alleges

    Wallin Expensed Private, Business Trips To Toronto And Guelph, RCMP Alleges
    OTTAWA — The RCMP has filed new documents in court alleging Pamela Wallin submitted 21 travel expense claims to the Senate for reimbursement for private and business trips to Toronto and Guelph.

    Wallin Expensed Private, Business Trips To Toronto And Guelph, RCMP Alleges

    Highlights Of Information Watchdog's Report On Access To Information Reform

    Highlights Of Information Watchdog's Report On Access To Information Reform
    OTTAWA — Highlights of information commissioner Suzanne Legault's special report to Parliament on Access to Information reform:

    Highlights Of Information Watchdog's Report On Access To Information Reform

    Lawsuit Veterans Expecting More Out Of Ottawa In Benefits Overhaul

    Lawsuit Veterans Expecting More Out Of Ottawa In Benefits Overhaul
    OTTAWA — Veterans at the centre of a class-action lawsuit against the federal government are waiting to see whether legislation introduced this week by the Harper government to improve benefits is the beginning, or the end, of reforms to the system.

    Lawsuit Veterans Expecting More Out Of Ottawa In Benefits Overhaul

    Credit Counselling In High Demand In Alberta As Oilpatch Downturn Hits Home

    Credit Counselling In High Demand In Alberta As Oilpatch Downturn Hits Home
    CALGARY — The Racette family is on a cash-only diet for the next four years. Dale Racette, a truck driver, and his wife, a school bus driver, are trying to dig themselves out of a $45,000 hole.

    Credit Counselling In High Demand In Alberta As Oilpatch Downturn Hits Home

    Racial Attack: Sikh Man Brutally Beaten Up In Birmingham. Watch!

    Racial Attack: Sikh Man Brutally Beaten Up In Birmingham. Watch!
    In a suspected racial attack, police in Britain have come across footage posted online in which a Sikh man is seen being brutally beaten up in Birmingham city Broad Street, a media report said on Tuesday.

    Racial Attack: Sikh Man Brutally Beaten Up In Birmingham. Watch!