Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Keeps Election Promise In Paris With $300Million-A-Year Clean Tech Commitment

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Nov, 2015 10:56 AM
    PARIS — Canada is promising $300 million a year for research and development on clean energy technology as part of splashy international kickoff to the opening day of the Paris climate conference.
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is promising the money toward an initiative announced today by Microsoft founder Bill Gates, U.S. President Barack Obama and French President Francois Hollande.
     
    The initiative, involving tens of billions of dollars in total, is the marquee event as two weeks of climate negotiations get underway at the UN-sponsored conference known as COP21.
     
    At least 19 governments —  from India, South Korea and Saudi Arabia to Australia and Norway — and 28 leading world investors are involved in the project.
     
    Individual investors include Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, billionaires George Soros and Saudi Prince Alaweed bin Talal, and Jack Ma of the Chinese online sales giant Alibaba.
     
    The money will focus on developing new technologies, such as better energy storage that makes more efficient and dependable use of clean power from wind and solar generation.
     
    "Canada is proud to be a partner in this ambitious global initiative," Trudeau said in a release.
     
     
    "By working together, we will deliver real benefits for our environment while also strengthening our economy, including through the creation of more middle class jobs."
     
    The Liberals committed to spending $300 million annually on two clean technology innovation funds during the October election that propelled them to a majority government; the Paris pledge simply reaffirms that promise.
     
    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall, who is one of five Canadian premiers on hand in Paris for the conference opening, arrived here with the stated aim of promoting carbon capture and storage technology that is being pioneered in his province.
     
    A new coal plant goes up every 13 days in China, Wall said Monday, and India has 500 new coal-fired generating stations in the works.
     
    "If we're serious about climate change, doing something about greenhouse gases, Canada can actually have a big vision of contributing technology that will help clean up the transition energies like coal," said Wall.
     
    The conference technically got underway Sunday afternoon at a giant airbase in Le Bourget, just outside Paris, with a minute of silence for the victims of this month's terrorist attacks in the French capital.
     
    The leaders' event took place Monday, with representatives of 151 countries attending two simultaneous, day-long working sessions where they each delivered short speeches before delegates got down to the laborious process of negotiating the text of a post-2020 climate framework.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother
    Sheila Fynes, whose son Cpl. Stuart Langridge died by his own hand in 2008, says she's been made cautiously optimistic by the promise, but the stigma of mental illness, which can lead to suicide, is still very much a part of the military mindset.

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office
    Day parole has been granted to an Alberta man who took nine people hostage at gunpoint in a Workers' Compensation Board office in downtown Edmonton.

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October
    The family of a terminally ill seven-year-old boy whose small Ontario town threw him an early Christmas parade has launched a foundation to support brain cancer research.

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October

    B.C., Developer And First Nation Partner On $1.5 Billion Expansion Plan For Ski Resort

    The province says it will collaborate with the Berezan Group and the local Sts'ailes Band to develop the Hemlock Resort into a tourist destination in the Fraser Valley.

    B.C., Developer And First Nation Partner On $1.5 Billion Expansion Plan For Ski Resort

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea
    Leslie Black pleaded guilty in April to the attempted murder of Marlene Bird on June 1, 2014 in Prince Albert.

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he intends to meet with Canada's first ministers on Nov. 23 in advance of the climate-change conference in Paris.

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change