Medicine Hat News

O’Toole claims the Tory climate plan will meet goals faster than Liberals

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The Conservati­ve election platform will contain a climate-change plan that could cut greenhouse-gas emissions faster than the Liberals’ plan will, leader Erin O’Toole says.

O’Toole told a virtual audience of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade that he “loves” the net-zero approach to carbon emissions, though not the wide-ranging federal carbon tax, and his party is working on a plan that would get Canada to its emissions goals.

“You’re going to see a very detailed plan ... that will, I think, make our commitment­s probably faster than Mr. Trudeau without a running-out-of-control federal carbon tax that he’s already promising,” O’Toole said during a question-andanswer session.

“Net-zero” is an approach that means either the

Canadian economy will emit no greenhouse gases or will offset those emissions other ways, absorbing equivalent greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. Last year, the

Liberals tabled a bill that would require Canada to reach net zero by 2050, and will set rolling emissions targets in the meantime.

Right now, the goal is to get Canada’s emissions 30 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030.

That legislatio­n was backed by a $15-billion plan, a plan that includes steady increases to the federal carbon tax.

How a Conservati­ve government would achieve the same reductions without that tax is one of the bigger questions plaguing the party’s policy shop.

Carbon pricing is an approach that some in the oil-producing regions of the country, as well as many Conservati­ve grassroots supporters, say is unfairly punitive and depresses economic growth.

Those in favour of the approach argue that if there’s no cost to using fossil fuels, there can be no meaningful reduction to emissions. Polls continue to suggest Canadians are receptive to the idea as one element of climate-change policy.

Polls also show many Canadians are worried about climate change and that the Conservati­ves’ failure to advance a meaningful plan to combat it has consistent­ly been a barrier to growing their support.

O’Toole had previously signalled he intends to shift course and has a policy team already at work on charting one. On their agenda is exploring how conservati­ve government­s elsewhere have tackled the problem.

To attract voters, especially millennial­s, O’Toole said he wants a made-in-Canada net zero approach that sees government partnering with, and pushing, organizati­ons to bring their emissions down, and carbon pricing that targets only industry, not individual­s.

“So I think millennial­s will see, maybe this isn’t your father’s Conservati­ve party,” he said.

O’Toole also said working more closely with the U.S. to harmonize environmen­tal regulation­s should also be part of the mix.

Earlier Thursday, his office released a readout of a call he had with the acting American ambassador to Canada, which did briefly touch on environmen­tal issues.

 ??  ?? Erin O’Toole
Erin O’Toole

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