Tuesday, May 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Clean energy centre launched in British Columbia

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jul, 2021 02:42 PM
  • Clean energy centre launched in British Columbia

British Columbia, Ottawa and Shell Canada are joining together to open a centre that will invest in low-carbon technologies. 

Premier John Horgan says each of them will contribute seed money of $35 million to stimulate other investment from the private sector on technologies like carbon capture, the use of low-carbon hydrogen and battery technology. 

The Centre for Innovation and Clean Energy is expected to be open by this fall, but a location for it has yet to be determined.

The goal of the centre is to attract a range of companies and partners to focus on B.C.-based clean-energy technology.

Shell Canada president Susannah Pierce says the company is accelerating plans to become a provider of net-zero emission energy products.

She says it is also working with sectors that are difficult to "decarbonize." 

"Rising to meet the challenge of global climate change requires joint action from business and government to help scale up cleaner energy solutions," she says. 

Horgan told a news conference Friday that the wildfire destruction in Lytton shows action is needed on climate change. A so-called heat dome pushed temperatures last month to a Canadian record in Lytton near 50 C on the day before the fire destroyed much of the village and a nearby First Nation. 

Horgan said the objective for the centre is to focus on the future to drive down emissions. 

"We have to change how we behave and that means making sure that we have energy systems in place to meet the needs of people, industry in our province and our country. And we need to do it in a way that's radically different from our past." 

MORE National ARTICLES

59 COVID19 cases for Thursday

59 COVID19 cases for Thursday
78.4% (3,635,811) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 40.0% (1,854,387) received their second dose.

59 COVID19 cases for Thursday

COVID vaccines still work against mutant, researchers find

COVID vaccines still work against mutant, researchers find
New research from France adds to evidence that widely used COVID-19 vaccines still offer strong protection against a coronavirus mutant that is spreading rapidly around the world and now is the most prevalent variant in the U.S.

COVID vaccines still work against mutant, researchers find

Jody Wilson-Raybould not seeking re-election

Jody Wilson-Raybould not seeking re-election
Independent MP Jody Wilson-Raybould will not seek re-election in the next federal campaign, saying in a letter to her constituents on Thursday that Parliament has become "toxic and ineffective" during her time in politics.

Jody Wilson-Raybould not seeking re-election

Canada monitoring 'whole slew' of variants: Tam

Canada monitoring 'whole slew' of variants: Tam
Tam says the Lambda variant first identified in Peru has been confirmed in 11 Canadian cases to date, but adds it's too early to know how widespread it is or what impact it could have.

Canada monitoring 'whole slew' of variants: Tam

PBO: Extending pandemic jobs program to cost $600M

PBO: Extending pandemic jobs program to cost $600M
Most of the extra spending, about $404 million, will take place in this fiscal year under the costing estimate the budget office put out today, with $174 million next year and a final $15 million the year after that.

PBO: Extending pandemic jobs program to cost $600M

Ottawa, B.C. reach deal on child-care funding

Ottawa, B.C. reach deal on child-care funding
Trudeau says the agreement stipulates Ottawa will work with the province to reach an average of $10-per-day child care in regulated spaces for children under six years old before 2027.

Ottawa, B.C. reach deal on child-care funding