Windsor Star

Federal climate fund continues programs

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Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna says the federal government plans to disburse money from a climate fund directly to Ontario institutio­ns and businesses after the provincial government cancelled its climate program.

Speaking at Rockwool insulation plant in Milton Thursday, McKenna said the remaining $420 million pending for Ontario from the Low Carbon Economy Fund will go to cities, hospitals, universiti­es, schools, and businesses to help with efficiency programs and other emission-reduction efforts.

“Our hope would have been to work with the provincial government on fighting pollution, tackling climate change, helping businesses with clean solutions, and helping Ontarians save money, but Mr. Ford has taken a different path, making polluting free, and cancelling hundreds of projects across communitie­s in Ontario.”

The federal government establishe­d the $2-billion fund to help provinces reduce greenhouse gas emissions and help meet Canada’s Paris Agreement commitment­s. Ontario’s share came into question after Premier Doug Ford scrapped the province’s cap and trade program and cancelled climate funding. Programs in the province that had been slated for funding through the program include $100 million in school retrofits for energy efficiency, $64 million for hospitals to do the same, as well as electric bus programs in Hamilton and Brampton, said McKenna. The Trudeau government is facing growing resistance over its climate plan from several premiers who are openly committed to fighting carbon pricing. The federal government has said it will impose a carbon price on provinces that don’t establish their own and then distribute the funds directly to residents. “If provincial government­s under conservati­ve leadership are going to step back, we are going to step up,” said McKenna. One environmen­tal group applauded the federal government’s move, comparing it to the work being done in the U.S. to bypass the Trump administra­tion on climate issues. “This is good news for maintainin­g momentum on greening Ontario’s economy,” Keith Stewart, a senior energy strategist Greenpeace Canada, said in an emailed statement. “Just like communitie­s dealing with (U.S. President Donald) Trump south of the border, Ontarians are going to have to find creative ways to work around a Premier who can’t or won’t recognize the urgency of the climate crisis.”

 ??  ?? Catherine McKenna
Catherine McKenna

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