Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Environment Minister Mckenna Says Job Is Keep All Aboard For Carbon Transition

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Apr, 2016 01:47 PM
    OTTAWA — Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna says her role is as a "kind of convener" among disparate factions of the progressive push for climate policies.
     
    McKenna appeared Friday at a panel discussion on environmental policy at the Progress Summit hosted by the Broadbent Institute, a left-leaning think tank.
     
    She was joined on the stage by Alberta Environment Minister Shannon Phillips and Vancouver city councillor Andrea Reimer, a lineup that illustrated there's no unanimity of thought on climate action even among those pointed in the same direction.
     
    Phillips represents a sea change in Alberta politics with an NDP government that's imposing carbon pricing and a hard cap on greenhouse gas emissions, while still pushing for expansion of the oilsands and new market access.
     
    Reimer, by contrast, sits on a city council that is striving to make Vancouver the greenest city on Earth and is resolutely against the construction of new pipelines.
     
    The Trudeau Liberals have made combating climate change a top government priority, but continue to frustrate some in the environmental movement with their qualified support for some as-yet, undefined new oil pipeline.
     
    Reimer called new pipeline construction "probably the big elephant in the room here today" in her opening remarks, sparking hoots of applause from the audience.  
     
     
    "Climate change is not a partisan file, it should not be a partisan file," McKenna responded, speaking after Reimer. 
     
    "Everyone knows we need to take action and we need to take action now. So I see my job as a kind of convener."
     
    In a question-and-answer session that followed, McKenna said the federal government is pushing the transition to a low-carbon economy. But she worries about alienating those Canadians who want action but fear economic disruption — saying she's trying to "keep everyone on board."
     
    "We need transition to a low-carbon economy, but we can't do it overnight. I'm a realist on this. There are a lot of people who have lost jobs in Alberta. I'm not saying that means we destroy our planet, but we do need to be thoughtful about how we move forward."
     
    McKenna acknowledged she was "preaching to the converted" at the Progress Summit, but said many other Canadians "are a little bit there."
     
    They want climate action, said the federal minister, "but if what we end up doing has a huge, immediate, dislocating affect on the economy, where tons of people lose jobs, I'm losing everyone. I'm losing them."
     
    Phillips, for her part, won applause when she said success on the low-carbon transition will not come by taking the current oil patch malaise "and make it worse. That is not the way we are going to succeed."
     
     
    But it was Reimer with her no-pipeline, no-how message who carried the room.
     
    "Way too much risk, no benefit — on a planet that is dying because we're burning fossil fuels. So the answer seems fairly clear: let's put our energy into a debate about renewable energy," said Reimer, drawing the panel's longest and biggest applause of the afternoon.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada
    In a letter to Citizenship Minister John McCallum, the groups say it's time to put an end to what has been a 20-year battle to deport Helmut Oberlander.

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.
    Charles Neil-Curly, 23, has been homeless for about five months and living in a North Battleford, Sask. shelter, but he says the province cut his funding, forcing him to find somewhere else to go.

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.

    Canada To Admit Record Number Of Immigrants In 2016

    Canada To Admit Record Number Of Immigrants In 2016
    The government of Canada announced an ambitious plan for 2016 immigration levels on Tuesday, aimed at reuniting more families.

    Canada To Admit Record Number Of Immigrants In 2016

    Dad Appeals Conviction In Death Of Daughter Whose Body Was Found In Burning Suitcase

    Dad Appeals Conviction In Death Of Daughter Whose Body Was Found In Burning Suitcase
    Everton Biddersingh argues there is still evidence in his case which has not been submitted to court.

    Dad Appeals Conviction In Death Of Daughter Whose Body Was Found In Burning Suitcase

    Strong Gusts Down Trees, Cut Power To Thousands Of South Coast Homes

    Strong Gusts Down Trees, Cut Power To Thousands Of South Coast Homes
    Environment Canada says potentially damaging wind gusts of up to 90 kilometres per hour are sweeping across most of region.

    Strong Gusts Down Trees, Cut Power To Thousands Of South Coast Homes

    More Than Two Dozen People Arrested In Quebec Drug Sweep

    MONTREAL — Police in several Quebec communities have arrested and charged 26 people following a series of drug raids in the province.

    More Than Two Dozen People Arrested In Quebec Drug Sweep