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What Does the New Political Reality Mean for Climate Action in Canada Prime Minister Trudeau’s recent decision to prorogue Parliament and announce his upcoming resignation may have left you wondering about what this could mean for climate change policy At Environmental Defence, we have two main take-aways:
Post-Trudeau Canadian government could roll back carbon, climate policies Canada’s 2025 federal election poses a threat to the Liberal Party’s currently unpopular platform, including carbon and climate policies that contributed to higher power prices, an S P Global Commodity Insights analyst said Jan 8 Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced plans to resign on Jan 6
Canadas new energy minister represents a dramatic policy shift . . . In particular, a new east-west line unexpectedly became a major consideration of the recent federal election campaign, after U S President Donald Trump’s trade war and sovereignty threats prompted the federal government to explore reducing Canada’s dependence on cross-border energy infrastructure
Carney’s cabinet likely means more of the same on energy and climate Little is known about exactly where the bulk of Prime Minister Carney’s new cabinet will take us, but the safe betting—in areas of environment, natural resources, climate change and transportation—is that we’re likely to see a continuance of Trudeau-era policies, though promulgated by somewhat more bland less-obviously-zealous eco-warriors
Climate Policy Under Justin Trudeau: A Brief Review In the post-pandemic cost-of-living crisis, the Trudeau-era climate policy with which Canadians have become most familiar is the federal carbon tax Implemented in June 2018 as the Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act (GGPPA), the federal carbon tax has two main components
Federal Climate Plans, Policies and Projections: Have no fear, CNZEAA . . . While CNZEAA implementation challenges would likely have been much more existential had Prime Minister Carney not been elected (e g potential repeal of the Act), and while the Carney government seems to be staying the course on much of the climate change law and policy put in place by the preceding government (see the election campaign climate
Federal government could deal with Trudeau-era climate policies `over . . . Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson did not commit to scrapping Trudeau-era climate policies that Alberta and Ontario want to see gone, but said the newly adopted major projects bill could pave the way to doing so “over time ”