Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds add $1.4 billion to climate change fund

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jul, 2021 10:04 AM
  • Feds add $1.4 billion to climate change fund

Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna says the federal government is adding almost $1.4 billion to the disaster mitigation and adaptation fund this year to help communities across Canada facing climate change and environmental disasters.

Speaking to reporters in Toronto Tuesday, McKenna says the funding will support communities in conducting projects to face the risks of wildfires and floods, rehabilitate storm water systems and restore wetlands and shorelines.

Her department says in a news release $670 million of the funding will be dedicated to small-scale projects between $1 million and $20 million while remaining funding will be allocated to large-scale projects above $20 million.

British Columbia's government has said accommodations for wildfire evacuees are filling up as the flames and smoke from numerous blazes spread, forcing more people from their homes and contributing to an acrid haze that's blanketing cities in neighbouring Alberta.

Smoke from the fires in B.C., as well as others in northern Saskatchewan, Manitoba and northwest Ontario, has resulted in special air quality advisories across the country.

The disaster mitigation and adaptation fund started in 2018 as a $2 billion program over 10 years to support communities in establishing the infrastructure they need to better handle natural disasters including floods, wildfires, earthquakes and droughts.

The new $1.4 billion fund will be spent over 12-year period, the department says.

McKenna says at least 10 per cent of the funding will go to Indigenous recipients.

"Climate change is having a devastating impact on Indigenous communities and a disproportionate impact," she says.

She says dealing with climate change should be through the same approach that the government has been taking in dealing with COVID-19 pandemic.

"We need to listen to science and scientists. We need to work with partners from municipalities to provinces to the private sector," she says.

"We all need to work together because, really, we have no choice."

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Post not subject to provincial inspections

Canada Post not subject to provincial inspections
The president of the national union representing postal workers said consistent standards should be applied to all workplaces, noting that the outbreak has had an "enormous impact on all postal workers."

Canada Post not subject to provincial inspections

Tighter border control measures come into effect

Tighter border control measures come into effect
At the Montreal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport, some travellers arriving on a flight from Brussels spoke of disconnected calls and hours or even days waiting on the line to make a reservation.

Tighter border control measures come into effect

Trudeau, Biden to hold virtual bilateral Tuesday

Trudeau, Biden to hold virtual bilateral Tuesday
Tuesday's virtual conversation between the two leaders will be Biden's first bilateral meeting as president.

Trudeau, Biden to hold virtual bilateral Tuesday

Canadian funding for homegrown vaccines lacking

Canadian funding for homegrown vaccines lacking
John Lewis, the CEO of Entos Pharmaceuticals in Alberta, says his company is one of six that received about $5 million to move their COVID-19 vaccine along.

Canadian funding for homegrown vaccines lacking

ATV rider found dead in Fraser Valley

ATV rider found dead in Fraser Valley
Kent Harrison Search and Rescue says in a social media post that its members responded late Saturday to reports about the missing 21-year-old.

ATV rider found dead in Fraser Valley

COVID-19 outbreak in unit at Vancouver hospital

COVID-19 outbreak in unit at Vancouver hospital
Visits to the unit, on the tenth floor of the hospital's highrise tower, have been suspended except for end-of-life compassionate visits.

COVID-19 outbreak in unit at Vancouver hospital