Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Report says $2T needed for net-zero economy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2021 10:16 AM
  • Report says $2T needed for net-zero economy

OTTAWA - A new report says the country will need roughly $2 trillion to put the economy on a path to net-zero emissions in 30 years, including government spending on things like skills training and backstops to prod the necessary investments.

The report from RBC Economics estimates governments, businesses and communities would have to spend at least $60 billion annually to cut emissions by 75 per cent of current levels and reach the 2050 target of net zero.

Money will be needed to build out the electricity system to handle the expected rise in electric vehicles, which will also need some subsidies to get them off assembly lines and onto Canadian roads, the report says.

There will also have to be investment in retrofitting old buildings faster than current federal plans predict, retraining 100,000 workers with new skills for fast-growing green sectors, and skills training programs to add 200,000 more into the labour force by 2030.

The numbers add up to a massive effort to meet the Trudeau Liberals' short-term and long-term promises on climate change, but one the Royal Bank report estimates is possible if the government eyes a few key areas.

"It's not about ideology, it's about math. And we've done the math and said, OK, here is how we can get those numbers down towards zero, and this is what it is going to cost," said John Stackhouse, senior vice-president in the office of the CEO at Royal Bank.

"We think that it's doable. So let's focus in a very kind of business-minded way on the key drivers of emissions change."

Parliament approved legislation last spring that required the country to eliminate as many greenhouse gas emissions as possible, and capture whatever is left to get to net zero by 2050.

The Liberals haven't outlined the course to the long-term goal, and won't before a United Nations climate change conference, known as COP26, looming at the end of the month in Glasgow, Scotland.

The government has increased its emissions-reduction targets for 2030 as required by the climate agreement.

Internal government documents suggest the Liberals are acutely aware of the cost to shift the country to net zero and have looked to push banks and other private sector investors to help with funding and financing.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's officials wrote in a September 2020 briefing note that the country's financial sector, including banks, "will need to play a major role" to create a net-zero economy. The briefing note created ahead of Freeland's meeting with bank CEOs also noted how their institutions needed to do more to "foster the right conditions to support the acceleration of sustainable investment."

Unlocking some of the needed spending will require federal politicians to create new platforms to channel private investment into green endeavors that may be akin to the Canada Infrastructure Bank.

The Liberals created the agency in 2017 to use federal dollars as a way to entice funding from private-sector investors, but its efforts and existence have become highly politicized with vows from the NDP and Conservatives to dismantle it if either are elected to govern.

Stackhouse said the country needs organizations similar to the infrastructure bank that can be semi-autonomous in terms of investment selections, but subject to government oversight.

Whatever gets created to spur investment has to survive successive governments through to 2050, and should be depoliticized for a better chance of success, he said.

"This is a 30-year project. There will be different governments during those 30 years. So let's create entities that can channel both public investment and crowd-in private investment to focus on the key strategic drivers," Stackhouse said.

But the report also warns of moving too fast, too soon. If there was a sudden and severe decline in oil and gas production, government revenues would fall by about $8 billion annually, which the report says could hamper, not help, the transition.

MORE National ARTICLES

2,090 COVID19 cases over 4 days

2,090 COVID19 cases over 4 days
There are 5,183 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 186,955 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 357 individuals are in hospital and 153 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

2,090 COVID19 cases over 4 days

Macron seeks face-to-face meeting with Trudeau

Macron seeks face-to-face meeting with Trudeau
Kareen Rispal, France's ambassador to Canada, said that in addition to unfinished business the two countries started before the COVID-19 pandemic, Macron wants to hear Trudeau's views on the alliance formed last month between the United States, Britain and Australia.

Macron seeks face-to-face meeting with Trudeau

Kids 5 and older must wear masks in public spaces

Kids 5 and older must wear masks in public spaces
Health Minister Adrian Dix says 55 critically ill people have been transferred from the region to intensive care units elsewhere in the province and that 43 of them were infected with COVID-19, with all but one of them not being fully vaccinated.

Kids 5 and older must wear masks in public spaces

Skeletal remains found in Newton: Surrey RCMP

Skeletal remains found in Newton: Surrey RCMP
On October 12, 2021, at 8:47 am, Surrey RCMP received a report of possible human skeletal remains located in bushes near 152 Street and 64 Avenue. City workers were in the area performing maintenance on the dyke when they discovered what they believed to be human skeletal remains.

Skeletal remains found in Newton: Surrey RCMP

Witnesses sought in Attempt Abduction

Witnesses sought in Attempt Abduction
On October 10, 2021 just before midnight, Surrey RCMP received a report that a woman was grabbed from behind by an unknown male who attempted to drag her away as she walked on a path in the green-space connecting Edinburgh Drive and 132 Street. 

Witnesses sought in Attempt Abduction

VPD appeals for witnesses to serious hit-and-run

VPD appeals for witnesses to serious hit-and-run
The victim, 30, was crossing East 41st Avenue at Fraser Street at 6:25 a.m. this morning when he was struck by a vehicle that was travelling west, causing serious head injuries.  The driver fled west without stopping.

VPD appeals for witnesses to serious hit-and-run