Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Alberta Premier Says Canadians Need Progressive Climate Change Plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Nov, 2015 12:46 PM
  • Alberta Premier Says Canadians Need Progressive Climate Change Plan
TORONTO — Premier Rachel Notley says Canadian families are paying for the failure of former conservative governments in Ottawa and Alberta to deal with climate change.
 
And she warns the energy sector will not be able to support thousands of well-paying direct and indirect jobs across the country if governments continue with discredited and failed policies of the past.
 
"Ignoring climate change is no way to develop the energy industry," the Alberta premier said in a prepared speech she gave Thursday evening at the Broadbent Institute Progress Gala.
 
"Canada needs to become a world leader on climate change — a world leader instead of the world's political football, as we were at the hands of our principal market and partner last week." 
 
Last Friday U.S. President Barack Obama denied a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline, a project that would have transported huge volumes of bitumen from Alberta's oilsands to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast.
 
Notley said since the NDP took power last May it has been working on a climate change strategy for Alberta. Some details are to be announced before she leaves later this month for the UN conference in Paris.
 
She said her government's priorities include using less coal to fuel electricity generating plants, introducing an energy efficiency program and other measures to reduce carbon emissions.
 
Alberta has already announced that it will double its carbon levy on large industrial emitters within two years.
 
"We will do what needs to be done," she told the crowd.
 
"So that Alberta and Canada can stand together before the world in Paris, and for decades to come, as one of the world's most progressive and environmentally responsible energy producers."
 
Notley said her government is also determined to challenge what she called other "orthodoxies" of the past by pushing for better policies for child care, parental leave and a higher minimum wage.
 
She said setting a longer term goal for balancing Alberta's budget will allow her government to support key areas such as health and education without damaging basic public services.
 
Notley called the plan moderate, mainstream and constructive.
 
"A plan in the great tradition of prairie progressive government," she said. "A tradition that stands as Canada's best alternative to the wrong priorities, failed policies and bad decisions of conservative rule."

MORE National ARTICLES

Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death

Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death
Doctors who are willing to assist in a patient's death once the act becomes legal early next year will need to be trained because they've never been taught the procedures for ending a life, the Canadian Medical Association says.

Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death

First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant

First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant
LELU ISLAND, B.C. — Some members of a north coast First Nation are gathering on a small island near Prince Rupert, B.C., to protest plans for a liquefied natural gas project

First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant

Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians

Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians
OTTAWA — Upon quitting the Conservative caucus in the spring of 2013, Alberta MP Brent Rathgeber declared he no longer wanted to be treated like a "trained seal," parroting media talking points written for him by the Prime Minister's Office.

Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians

Tar Ponds court action shut down after 11 years of wrangling

Tar Ponds court action shut down after 11 years of wrangling
HALIFAX — The law firm that represents Cape Breton residents who launched a class-action lawsuit claiming the Sydney tar ponds exposed them to contaminants has concluded the litigation should stop after 11 years of legal wrangling.

Tar Ponds court action shut down after 11 years of wrangling

Deja Vu For Searchers Wrapping Up Second Rescue For B.C. Mushroom Picker

Deja Vu For Searchers Wrapping Up Second Rescue For B.C. Mushroom Picker
A mushroom picker is safe after spending two nights lost in the bush in northwestern British Columbia, but for searchers, his rescue was practically a reunion.

Deja Vu For Searchers Wrapping Up Second Rescue For B.C. Mushroom Picker

Neighbours Try Unsuccessfully To Save Elderly Woman From Kamloops Apartment Fire

Neighbours Try Unsuccessfully To Save Elderly Woman From Kamloops Apartment Fire
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — An elderly woman has died in an apartment fire in Kamloops, B.C.

Neighbours Try Unsuccessfully To Save Elderly Woman From Kamloops Apartment Fire