Don’t Pit Pipelines Against Wind Turbines, PM Tells Clean Tech Conference

Don’t Pit Pipelines Against Wind Turbines, PM Tells Clean Tech Conference
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addresses the Globe 2016 conference in Vancouver on March. 2, 2016. (The Canadian Press/Jonathan Hayward)
The Canadian Press
3/2/2016
Updated:
3/2/2016

VANCOUVER—Prime Minister Justin Trudeau used a speech to a clean tech conference on Wednesday, March 2, to make a direct pitch for the expansion of Canada’s oil and gas sector—a direction he later appeared to dial back in response to media questions.

Trudeau began a day-and-a-half of meetings on climate policy with the provincial and territorial premiers by heralding the promise of jobs and opportunity in a low-carbon economy.

He announced two new funds, totalling more than $125 million, to help municipalities and spur clean innovation by promoting climate-friendly infrastructure projects and assist with their design.

But in recognition of the growing tensions bubbling just under the surface of a country divided by natural resource wealth, he attempted to quarantine the divisive politics of oilsands and pipeline expansion.

Trudeau received an effusive welcome from a packed plenary of the Globe clean tech conference, where he opened the week-long trade and networking show with a speech promoting economic opportunities.

“But we must continue to generate wealth from our abundant natural resources to fund this transition to this low-carbon economy,” he said at the speech’s mid-point.

“The choice between pipelines and wind turbines is a false one,” Trudeau continued. “We need both to reach our goal. And as we continue to ensure there is a market for our natural resources, our deepening commitment to a cleaner future will be a valuable advantage.”

It was not an applause line in this green coastal city.

Trudeau was in Vancouver to make good on an election pledge to meet with the premiers within three months of the Paris climate conference. But his promise to set new emissions targets for the country and create a pan-Canadian climate policy has morphed into finding an agreeable roadmap toward building a policy framework.

Even that process-heavy goal appears under stress this week.

Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall continues to torpedo any talk of carbon pricing, and there was talk in the corridors Wednesday of Saskatchewan not participating in a proposed federal-provincial working group looking at carbon price models.

Trudeau’s efforts to give Wall and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley some breathing room on pipelines immediately ran into opposition here.

An onstage question-and-answer session took a fast detour when the first question to the prime minister noted that the global climate has already warmed by one degree Celsius.

“How can we have the Energy East pipeline even on the table?” demanded Ziya Tong, the host of a popular science program, to scattered hoots and applause from the audience.

Trudeau responded that “we all know we have to get beyond fossil fuels, but we are simply not there yet.” The issue emerged again during his subsequent news conference.

“One of the responsibilities of any and every Canadian prime minister is to get our resources to market,” he said. “Canada has natural resources and we need to develop those as part our economy and part of our growth.”

Trudeau concluded the news conference by denying his government is creating conditions for more fossil fuels to be burned.

“Actually, what we’re trying to do is decrease consumption of oil and gas,” he said.

“That’s where the investments in renewables, the investments in clean tech, are such an important part of our vision for the future.”

From The Canadian Press