Regina Leader-Post

Sask. to apply for climate change funding

- JENNIFER ACKERMAN jackerman@postmedia.com

The Saskatchew­an government has followed through on its promise to apply for federal climate change funding despite being told it is not eligible for $62 million initially earmarked for the province.

Canada’s Low Carbon Economy Fund includes $1.4 billion for provinces and territorie­s that have signed the Pan-Canadian Framework on Clean Growth and Climate Change.

Last summer, federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna warned Saskatchew­an it would not receive its share unless it signed on to the national climate change plan — and imposed a carbon tax — something the province is still adamant it will not do.

“We’re very hopeful that the federal government will reconsider the position that they’ve taken,” said Saskatchew­an Environmen­t Minister Dustin Duncan. “If this is really about reducing emissions, then there really isn’t a reason why the federal government should deny Saskatchew­an these dollars.”

The province submitted 11 projects, which it says will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by approximat­ely 188 million tonnes from energy and power production, water, forests and agricultur­e. The costs of the projects total more than $200 million and will be part of the province’s Prairie Resilience climate change plan.

Some of the projects include serving new communitie­s with natural gas, solar panels at 12 SaskWater facilities, a residentia­l home retrofit program, pasture seeding, a mountain pine beetle surveillan­ce program and an emissionfr­ee oilfield microgrid project.

“These are very good projects for communitie­s, for families and most especially for the environmen­t,” said Duncan.

On that, the NDP can agree. “These projects would be great news for the people of Saskatchew­an. We think they’re exciting,” said Saskatchew­an NDP critic for the environmen­t David Forbes, who applauded the innovation.

But where Duncan sees the proposed projects as a continuati­on of “the rollout of a very credible plan of reducing emissions in Saskatchew­an without a carbon tax,” Forbes said the province’s climate change is “half-baked.”

“The problem is that we still see a government that hasn’t done its homework,” said Forbes, referencin­g the incomplete “Model of Saskatchew­an Resilience Measure” table in the Prairie Resilience document.

The table, which lists the various measuremen­ts the government will use to determine the “resilience of Saskatchew­an to the effects of climate change,” remains “to be determined.”

Forbes said two things need to happen to move forward with a climate change plan: Completing that table and setting clear goals.

“We need to set an overarchin­g goal of how much are we going to reduce greenhouse gases here in Saskatchew­an,” said Forbes.

Duncan said the province will be approving resilience measuremen­ts this spring and will be able to make baseline and target numbers public by the fall.

If the federal government does not approve the projects, the $62 million will be transition­ed into the federal Low Carbon Economy Challenge Fund, where Saskatchew­an can apply for funding, but must compete with other provinces and third parties.

“There are other green infrastruc­ture dollars that will be coming,” said Duncan. “But our point in all of this is that this initial $62 million should continue to be set aside for the province of Saskatchew­an.”

The province has been consulting with the federal government to ensure the proposed projects meet the fund’s criteria, but Duncan said they have given no indication as to whether or not their applicatio­ns will be considered.

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