The Prague Post - Canada PM under fire for alleged climate U-turn

EUR -
AED 4.264325
AFN 77.121934
ALL 96.676663
AMD 442.677416
ANG 2.078522
AOA 1064.774162
ARS 1690.126975
AUD 1.769158
AWG 2.09007
AZN 1.972711
BAM 1.956356
BBD 2.339335
BDT 141.92792
BGN 1.954965
BHD 0.437693
BIF 3431.016697
BMD 1.16115
BND 1.507516
BOB 8.026214
BRL 6.194972
BSD 1.161515
BTN 104.49737
BWP 15.522281
BYN 3.371801
BYR 22758.544614
BZD 2.335924
CAD 1.623863
CDF 2571.947449
CHF 0.934349
CLF 0.027438
CLP 1076.641394
CNY 8.211364
CNH 8.208405
COP 4426.594985
CRC 571.952814
CUC 1.16115
CUP 30.770481
CVE 110.297319
CZK 24.160981
DJF 206.827041
DKK 7.468489
DOP 73.320853
DZD 151.112358
EGP 55.181464
ERN 17.417254
ETB 179.390874
FJD 2.635465
FKP 0.877856
GBP 0.879165
GEL 3.12928
GGP 0.877856
GHS 13.205642
GIP 0.877856
GMD 84.764015
GNF 10091.957103
GTQ 8.89753
GYD 242.997017
HKD 9.040425
HNL 30.600703
HRK 7.530869
HTG 151.993227
HUF 381.058737
IDR 19297.504108
ILS 3.775486
IMP 0.877856
INR 104.425202
IQD 1521.53273
IRR 48913.45365
ISK 148.580403
JEP 0.877856
JMD 186.082923
JOD 0.823267
JPY 181.231153
KES 150.195361
KGS 101.54267
KHR 4650.282509
KMF 492.327722
KPW 1045.011898
KRW 1703.686734
KWD 0.356485
KYD 0.967967
KZT 588.867333
LAK 25200.950209
LBP 104010.785296
LKR 358.685833
LRD 205.584928
LSL 19.891157
LTL 3.428575
LVL 0.702368
LYD 6.3288
MAD 10.747357
MDL 19.727441
MGA 5196.433132
MKD 61.647533
MMK 2438.717025
MNT 4129.37302
MOP 9.314829
MRU 46.224146
MUR 53.575359
MVR 17.893001
MWK 2014.055459
MXN 21.242889
MYR 4.798451
MZN 74.196494
NAD 19.891157
NGN 1679.162956
NIO 42.74142
NOK 11.771335
NPR 167.194671
NZD 2.024663
OMR 0.446464
PAB 1.16152
PEN 3.917347
PGK 4.924401
PHP 68.115407
PKR 328.116166
PLN 4.237716
PYG 8055.290955
QAR 4.245207
RON 5.088741
RSD 117.364401
RUB 89.84906
RWF 1689.966078
SAR 4.358742
SBD 9.549094
SCR 16.37567
SDG 698.435613
SEK 10.970518
SGD 1.506558
SHP 0.871163
SLE 26.648365
SLL 24348.737701
SOS 662.577027
SRD 44.752475
STD 24033.46552
STN 24.506653
SVC 10.162978
SYP 12838.823647
SZL 19.887485
THB 37.145543
TJS 10.726258
TMT 4.064026
TND 3.422773
TOP 2.795771
TRY 49.284089
TTD 7.874104
TWD 36.467099
TZS 2861.673374
UAH 49.119693
UGX 4152.145127
USD 1.16115
UYU 45.623368
UZS 13816.929586
VES 286.793855
VND 30625.337459
VUV 142.06578
WST 3.251605
XAF 656.137957
XAG 0.020115
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.138067
XCG 2.093259
XDR 0.815986
XOF 656.149262
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.760386
ZAR 19.872901
ZMK 10451.739939
ZMW 26.68536
ZWL 373.889902
  • RBGPF

    1.2200

    79

    +1.54%

  • CMSD

    -0.0450

    23.245

    -0.19%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    13.83

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.25

    -0.3%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.4

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -0.4760

    74.654

    -0.64%

  • RIO

    -0.3350

    71.635

    -0.47%

  • VOD

    0.2050

    12.335

    +1.66%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    23.17

    -1.38%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.76

    -0.15%

  • RELX

    -0.1100

    39.61

    -0.28%

  • NGG

    0.1300

    75.78

    +0.17%

  • GSK

    0.8350

    48.025

    +1.74%

  • AZN

    0.1000

    90.62

    +0.11%

  • BP

    -0.2350

    36.275

    -0.65%

  • BTI

    -0.2650

    57.865

    -0.46%

Canada PM under fire for alleged climate U-turn
Canada PM under fire for alleged climate U-turn / Photo: Dave Chan - AFP/File

Canada PM under fire for alleged climate U-turn

Critics accuse Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney of betraying the fight against climate change.

Text size:

Others say he is facing reality and has no choice but boost polluting sectors that are vital to an economy being punished by US President Donald Trump's trade war.

But there is no dispute that since replacing former prime minister Justin Trudeau in March Carney has repositioned his Liberal Party on the environment.

Immediately after taking office, Carney scrapped Trudeau's unpopular carbon tax on individuals.

He then launched a Major Projects Office to fast-track initiatives he said would strengthen Canada's economic sovereignty, creating a bulwark against the impacts of Trump's tariffs.

Mining and natural gas projects -- criticized by some environmental advocates -- were among the early picks.

But the most dramatic development came on Thursday, when Carney struck a deal with the conservative-led energy-producing Alberta province to advance a new oil pipeline, while increasing overall oil and gas production.

"Canada and Alberta are striking a new partnership to build a stronger, more sustainable, and more independent Albertan and Canadian economy," Carney said.

"We will make Canada an energy superpower, drive down our emissions and diversify our export markets.”

The deal marked a clear pivot for Carney's Liberal Party and a departure from the policies that defined Trudeau's decade in power.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, who loathed Trudeau's policies, said this month that "the tone of federal government has done a 180 in the last year."

Steven Guilbeault, a member of Carney's cabinet, who was also Trudeau's environment minister, agreed.

He resigned Thursday, hours after the pipeline deal was signed.

Guilbeault said he entered politics "to champion the fight against climate change," but that key green policies he implemented with Trudeau were being "dismantled" under Carney.

- Climate policy 'erosion'? -

Carney, a former central banker, worked on climate issues before joining politics in January, but has emphasized market-driven solutions to environmental challenges.

In 2019, he became a UN envoy focused on mobilizing public and private finance to help achieve the goals of the Paris Accords.

He then joined the massive Canadian multinational firm Brookfield, steering private capital to aid climate action.

The Alberta pipeline plan is in its infancy and may never move forward.

But Carney's memorandum of understanding with Alberta to advance an initiative that involves piping bitumen to Canada's northwest Pacific coast and building a massive port to accommodate oil tankers has drawn outrage.

Carney said the plan could be a win-win.

Increased oil exports to Asia would reduce Canada's economic dependence on an unreliable United States, he said.

And, he stressed, the deal requires oil companies to pay a steep industrial carbon tax, which could help fund cleaner energy sources, while the impact of rising emissions would be offset through carbon capture -- a controversial technology.

Sierra Club Canada's communications chief, Conor Curtis, told AFP there has been an "erosion of climate policy," under the new Liberal government.

"A new oil pipeline is not necessary. We are in the middle of a global transition to renewable energy," he said in an interview before Thursday's signing.

- 'Profound disruptions' -

Tim McMillan, the former president of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, said Carney had no choice but to embrace the oil sector.

"After 10 years of cancelled projects and lowering GDP per capita and standards of living in Canada, we're at a point, especially with the US tariff threats, that Canada needs to look at our strengths," McMillan told AFP.

"Oil and gas are at the top of that list."

Even Guilbeault, a prominent environmental activist before entering politics, acknowledged Carney was in a tough spot, conceding that Trump had triggered "profound disruptions" in Canada's key economic relationship.

"Despite this difficult economic context, I remain one of those for whom environmental issues must remain front and center," he said.

O.Ruzicka--TPP