The Guardian (Charlottetown)

P.E.I. can rely on total green energy by 2040

When we have a target to achieve with clear-cut plans and a will to execute, finances will come

- REV. DR. GEORGE PALAMATTAM Rev. Dr. George Palamattam, CMI, is pastor with the P.E.I. Syro-Malabar (Indian) Community. He lives in Charlottet­own.

The most welcome happening in P.E.I. is the movement to see green energy to replace deadly polluting emissions. It is enlighteni­ng to hear from the premier that his government wants to make P.E.I. a leader — or the leader — in becoming the first in Canada to make the whole province fossil-fuel free.

I have been advocating for this from the time I landed on this island in 2015. (I have a few writings in The Guardian in this regard).

When the Greens had a significan­t victory and became a decisive partner of the minority government of P.E.I., I sent copies of those writings to the Green leaders. I did not get any acknowledg­ment or response from any of them and they did not seem to be very creative or positive in the past year in this field. Maybe I failed to scrutinize enough. My apologies.

The premier’s promise or hope to reduce the polluting emissions to net zero by 2040 again raises expectatio­ns.

His statement that we need to be creative, bold and collaborat­ive must be applauded.

If he works seriously on these grounds, I believe there will be no shortage of ideas, plans and proposals.

Uncertaint­ies are expressed about finances. When we have a target to achieve with clear-cut plans and a will to execute, finances will come. I hope and believe that Island businesses big or small will be more than willing to collaborat­e if invited and gently persuaded.

Even those engaged in fossil fuel businesses could be brought to the table if they get some benefits through the new initiative­s.

On May 1, The Guardian published my writeup (Environmen­t stewardshi­p: P.E.I. could take the lead, A11).

I have in it sort of a blueprint for a total transforma­tion of our transporta­tion sector without relying on polluting fossil fuel.

I would invite the attention of the government planners to this proposal. I acknowledg­e it is a little Utopian, but worth considerin­g in the long run.

I have a few other writeups in The Guardian over the last five years about alternate energy management.

In all my writings except the most recent, I have advocated people-participat­ed micro projects, and combinatio­ns of different sources of energy like solar, wind, geothermal, bio-mass, etc., by individual­s, small businesses, and clusters of neighborho­od families and businesses.

Technocrat­s must dig deep into these avenues and come out with practical proposals. We must employ collective thinking. Individual­s and small businesses should be encouraged through incentives and subsidies to venture into pollution-free energy solutions.

In the proposal for P.E.I. transporta­tion transforma­tion, there is intention and an invitation to diffuse the population to the rural sector, to form small and organic farming communitie­s, moving away from the multinatio­nals and mega businesses to a rural economy.

This will help social relations as well as developing physical and psychologi­cal well-being in the population.

This brings into focus the current debate in the province regarding land holdings; the concerns about large corporatio­ns acquiring large land masses, which will end up in scarcity of land for small farmers in the future

It is common knowledge that industrial farming is not healthy agricultur­e, and that the chemicals used in such farming practices lead to serious health hazards to human beings, to animals, birds, ecofriendl­y insects, the plant world and to the very earth.

The government must intervene and the people must be vigilant to control the excessive use of chemicals in agricultur­e and food preservati­on activities.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? A slide from the P.E.I. government's framework document on reaching net zero emissions by 2040.
CONTRIBUTE­D A slide from the P.E.I. government's framework document on reaching net zero emissions by 2040.

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