Regina Leader-Post

LEGAULT AIMS TO CUT QUEBEC OIL USAGE 40% BY 2030.

- CAROLINE PLANTE

• The Quebec

government will reduce oil consumptio­n in the province by 40 per cent by 2030 through a vast program to shift transporta­tion systems, buildings and businesses to hydroelect­ricity, Premier François Legault announced Sunday as his party held a general council meeting in Montreal.

Legault said his plan to

“electrify Quebec” will require massive investment­s, which he said could be unlocked by reviewing the management of the government’s Green Fund and by increasing funding for infrastruc­ture planning.

He said that from now on his government will only finance public transit projects that are electric and that are

built mostly in Quebec, and

will take steps to ensure that all new public buildings be powered by clean energy as of 2020.

“I want that in four years, it will be said that no government has realized as many public transit projects as

the Coalition Avenir Québec

government,” Legault said in a speech to 1,300 party members.

Legault said he’s tasked his transport minister with seven different projects, including the expansion of an existing subway line and a light-rail system being built in Montreal, as well as tram

way projects for Quebec City

and Montreal’s South Shore.

The premier told reporters after the speech that he would look for a way to increase the involvemen­t of local companies in these projects, pointing out that the United States requires 65 to 70 per cent local content.

“We have to see what the laws allow,” he said.

Quebecers who live outside major urban centres and who do not have access to public transporta­tion will benefit from further incentives to buy electric vehicles, he added.

The government estimates that a million electric vehicles could reduce oil consumptio­n by six per cent.

Legault said his government would also put incentives in place to encourage owners of residentia­l and commercial properties, as well as those in the industrial and agricultur­e sectors, to switch from heating oil to hydroelect­ricity, and called for more innovation and new technologi­es to aid in the transition.

The premier, who has

sought to position Quebec as

the “green battery of North America,” also said he was confident he’d be able to

reach deals to sell Quebec

hydroelect­ricity to Ontario and New York City.

He said he would offer Ontario “a deal they can’t refuse: cheaper energy and clean energy.”

Last fall, Legault pro

posed a plan to sell Quebec

hydroelect­ricity to Ontario so the province could avoid costly repairs to its nuclear power plants, but the proposal was rejected by Doug Ford’s government.

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