Monday, June 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

Trudeau says he will guarantee emissions targets

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Oct, 2022 04:22 PM
  • Trudeau says he will guarantee emissions targets

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday he will guarantee that Canada is going to meet its latest climate target, because this time it's accompanied by a plan that shows how to get there.

Since 1988, Canada has set its sights on eight different greenhouse gas emissions targets. Six of them have come and gone, and Canada never came anywhere close to meeting them.

The next target is set for 2030, and requires Canada to get emissions to 55 to 60 per cent of what they were in 2005. That's a more-ambitious version of a previous target the Trudeau government set when it came into power. 

Based on emissions levels in 2020, meeting the new target would mean cutting about 23 million tonnes of emissions a year, on average. That's the equivalent of taking five million passenger cars off the road every 12 months until the end of the decade.

In a question-and-answer session at the Canadian Climate Institute's conference in Ottawa on Tuesday, Bloomberg News climate reporter Akshat Rathi asked if Trudeau would guarantee that Canada can do that.

His response? "Yes."

"Every other plan was based on targets," Trudeau said. "Any politician can put forward a target. Can you actually put forward a plan to do it?"

The Liberals' first climate plan in 2016 set a course toward their initial 2030 target, but never included enough initiatives to actually get there. 

Trudeau said Canada's Emissions Reduction Plan, published in March, does provide a road map all the way to the new target established last year.

For the first time, the plan outlines the emissions that have to be eliminated to hit the 2030 target sector-by-sector, and  spells out some, though not all, of the ways that can be achieved.

The oil and gas sector will be required to cap emissions at current levels and then ratchet them down 38 per cent by 2030. The specifics of that cap are in development now, with more details expected next year.

A new tax credit to help oil and gas producers install carbon capture and storage systems will be one of the heavy lifters to help the sector hit its goals. But the industry has been clear it thinks the government's timeline is too ambitious.

Transportation needs to cut emissions 11 per cent, largely by replacing combustion-engine vehicles with electric versions.

The electricity grid, which is already about 80 per cent clean, needs to further cut emissions by 88 per cent, which will largely come by closing coal-fired power plants and installing carbon capture systems on gas plants.

But Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said at the conference Tuesday that to meet its climate goals, Canada also needs to double or triple the electricity we produce. And to do that, he said, the government is going to have to invest a lot more in renewable energy.

"It is going to need to be of a much more significant scale for us to move forward," he said.

Trudeau wouldn't put a timeline on when Canada will start to see a significant decline in greenhouse gas emissions heading toward 2030. 

Between 2015, when the Liberals took office, and 2019, emissions went up about 0.7 per cent. In 2020, when COVID-19 shut down large swaths of the economy for weeks on end, emissions finally showed a sharp drop, declining nine per cent compared to 2019.

The 2021 numbers are expected to rebound, given that the economy was much more open.

Skepticism of Trudeau's climate guarantee is rampant among his political opponents.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said in question period Tuesday that "the Liberals have not hit a single, solitary climate target since they took office."

He has promised to cut the carbon price and said Trudeau is a hypocrite for charging extra for "little old ladies" to heat their homes in the winter while he jets around the world on vacations.

MORE National ARTICLES

Fed study details groups hit hardest by tax system

Fed study details groups hit hardest by tax system
Women were more likely than men to lose out on 60 per cent or more of their extra earnings, which the recently released analysis chalks up to their slightly greater reliance on federal supports.

Fed study details groups hit hardest by tax system

Canadian professor in Ukraine longs for peace

Canadian professor in Ukraine longs for peace
The sirens can go on for 15 minutes, or as long as two hours. One Saturday-night alarm lasted three hours. The sirens go off two or three times a day, but so far, the city has been spared any bombings.

Canadian professor in Ukraine longs for peace

Clocks jump ahead in most of Canada on Sunday

Clocks jump ahead in most of Canada on Sunday
Only Yukon and most of Saskatchewan observe permanent daylight time and won't change their clocks with the rest of Canada early Sunday. B.C. outlined a plan to switch permanently in 2019, but the legislation did not set a date because the province is waiting for Washington, Oregon and California to also approve the change.

Clocks jump ahead in most of Canada on Sunday

Hospital director can allow Schoenborn leave

Hospital director can allow Schoenborn leave
AllanSchoenborn has been held at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital in Coquitlam since 2010 after killing his 10-year-old daughter and two sons, aged five and eight.

Hospital director can allow Schoenborn leave

B.C. man knocked unconscious by thrown egg: RCMP

B.C. man knocked unconscious by thrown egg: RCMP
Police say in a news release that the man was standing with two friends on the street when the egg was thrown from a side passenger window of a small dark-coloured vehicle

B.C. man knocked unconscious by thrown egg: RCMP

B.C. preparing for Ukrainian refugees: Horgan

B.C. preparing for Ukrainian refugees: Horgan
Horgan said Friday he met with Ukrainian community leaders and spoke earlier with refugee settlement agencies and some faith groups about plans to meet the housing, health and transition needs of those fleeing the war.

B.C. preparing for Ukrainian refugees: Horgan