Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Gasoline use plunged in first year of pandemic

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Oct, 2021 02:44 PM
  • Gasoline use plunged in first year of pandemic

OTTAWA - Pandemic lockdowns that left Canadian cars sitting idle in driveways and garages for weeks on end last year pushed gasoline use to its lowest level in two decades.

Statistics Canada data show Canadians bought 38.6 billion litres of gas in 2020, 14 per cent less than the year before and less than in any other year since 2001.

Translated into greenhouse gas emissions, the reduction of about six billion litres of gasoline is about the same as taking 3.1 million cars off the road.

Every province saw gas purchases fall but the biggest drop came in Ontario where the lockdowns lasted longer than in most other provinces and drivers bought 18 per cent less gas than in 2019.

A study in the journal Nature Climate Change earlier this year said emissions likely fell seven per cent globally in 2020, almost entirely because of public health measures to keep COVID-19 from spreading.

But Caroline Brouillette, national policy manager at the Climate Action Network Canada, says without structural changes to how Canadians get themselves from place to place, emissions cuts caused by the pandemic are unlikely to be permanent.

 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Study rates Canadian governments on conservation

Study rates Canadian governments on conservation
A new report grades Canadian governments in how they responded to the country's international promise to conserve at least 17 per cent of its land mass and 10 per cent of its oceans by 2020.

Study rates Canadian governments on conservation

CRA audits of ultra-wealthy yield zero convictions

CRA audits of ultra-wealthy yield zero convictions
Data from the Canada Revenue Agency shows its recent efforts to combat tax evasion by the super-rich have resulted in zero prosecutions or convictions.

CRA audits of ultra-wealthy yield zero convictions

Canadians say COVID-19 restrictions should stay

Canadians say COVID-19 restrictions should stay
Sixty-nine per cent of respondents to an online survey by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies say restrictions should stay in place as people continue to get vaccinated against the novel coronavirus.

Canadians say COVID-19 restrictions should stay

Commission on election debates sets criteria

Commission on election debates sets criteria
The commission of the official leaders' debates for Canada's elections says one of the criteria for participating in the next set is parties must have at least four per cent of national support.

Commission on election debates sets criteria

UNESCO says World Heritage site "likely" in danger

UNESCO says World Heritage site
A United Nations agency says Canada's largest national park is now so threatened that it could likely be placed on the list of World Heritage sites in danger.

UNESCO says World Heritage site "likely" in danger

Schools unlikely COVID transmission sites: study

Schools unlikely COVID transmission sites: study
The study by researchers from BC Children’s Hospital, the University of British Columbia and Vancouver Coastal Health examined COVID-19 infections among teachers and staff throughout the Vancouver district.

Schools unlikely COVID transmission sites: study