Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Climate fight helps economy: Trudeau

- GABRIEL FRIEDMAN

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made a surprise appearance at an annual mining conference in downtown Toronto on Monday to pitch the idea that having a national policy framework to reduce the country’s carbon emissions to net zero by 2050 is good for the economy.

It marked his second consecutiv­e appearance at the annual Prospector­s and Developers Associatio­n of Canada conference.

This year, however, Trudeau appeared one week after Teck Resources Ltd. cancelled its applicatio­n for a permit to build a $20.6-billion mine in Alberta’s oilsands, with its chief executive Don Lindsay citing a lack of clear policy in Canada about carbon taxes and other climate change legislatio­n. The prime minister’s appearance also came after weeks of protests temporaril­y stopped the constructi­on of the Coastal Gaslink pipeline in British Columbia and inspired dozens of other protests, including rail blockades that paralyzed parts of the country’s economy.

Trudeau acknowledg­ed that reconcilin­g resource developmen­t and climate change is polarizing, and transition­ing to a low-carbon economy will be difficult for some industries such as mining. But he insisted “protecting the environmen­t” is the best way to attract investment in Canada and called on all government­s to work co-operativel­y on climate change policies.

“Of course we can only create a better, stronger economy for everyone if we are fighting climate change at the same time,” said Trudeau. “We know that, Canadians know that — we just haven’t reached that point of consensus ... about the best way to do it.”

Still, he compared the situation to the debate around “free trade” in the late 1980s and 1990s, saying polarizing topics can divide the country, but eventually a consensus emerges.

“There’s still pockets of this country ... arguing about whether or not to protect the environmen­t,” he said, “but as we saw from the free trade debate that can flip fairly quickly.”

He cited a January letter by Larry Fink, chief executive of Blackrock, which manages a $9.3-trillion investment fund, that describes a shift in finance. That fund is divesting coal assets, and calls on corporatio­ns to devise more sustainabl­e policies.

Trudeau also pointed to plans by Rio Tinto and Alcoa, announced in 2018, to build a research facility in Quebec that would produce the world’s first carbon-emissions-free aluminum, as an example of how Canada is a leader in clean natural resource developmen­t. “That’s the type of investment we want to attract,” he said.

Before he took the stage, Ian Mackay, chief executive of the federal government agency Invest in Canada, said that recent statistics show that foreign direct investment actually increased in 2019 by 19 per cent to $66.8 billion.

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