Sunday, June 8, 2025

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Sunday, June 8, 2025 | Latest Paper

Lametti, opposition parties pledge to uphold Wilson-Raybould’s new rules for defending Indigenous lawsuits

Attorney General David Lametti and the opposition justice critics say they will stand behind former justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould’s instructions to government lawyers, telling them to give fair treatment to First Nations suing the government over treaty rights, after departing PCO clerk Michael Wernick warned Ms. Wilson-Raybould’s instructions could be “gutted” by a new government […]

Canada’s forest sector in a changing economy

Canadians are proud of our forests—and rightly so. Our forests have played a major role in building our country from our beginnings, and they continue to drive our economy today. If you go on a cross-country road trip, you will see the forest sector at work everywhere— on our coastlines, in the North, in urban […]

Sohi says investments in green economy won’t leave traditional energy workers behind

As Canada moves away from coal-powered energy, the federal Liberal government has invested $150-million in communities that depend on coal as an economic driver, says Natural Resources Minister Amarjeet Sohi. “These new measures will give working Canadians greater confidence about their ability to provide for their families down the road,” Mr. Sohi (Edmonton Mill Woods, […]

It’s time to shift our perspective from ‘disaster management’ to climate resilience

From last week’s ‘bomb cyclone’ causing record-breaking floods in the U.S. Midwest, to the World Economic Forum’s recent warning that extreme weather events are the most threatening global risks this year, news on the climate change front isn’t good these days. Last fall, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reported that the impacts of climate […]

Zero-emission vehicle subsidies and home heating tax exemptions: both fail the test

Two recent announcements—one by the Liberals and one by the Conservatives—show that neither party has cornered the market on bad ideas for spending taxpayers’ money. In the 2019 budget, the government announced a subsidy of up to $5,000 to encourage consumers to purchase electric-battery or hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles. Canada already has experience with these types […]

Canada’s climate counting problem

Canada’s greenhouse gas emission targets are wrong—not because they are too tough or not tough enough, but because they are based on the wrong measurement. The measurement approach adopted by the global community through the Paris Agreement only counts GHG emissions that occur where products are produced, but not where they are consumed. This means […]

Mass timber construction has the world moving quickly to building with more wood

Canada’s forestry and construction sectors of the economy have the potential to be major contributors to reducing greenhouse gases, but some things will have to change. For most of the 20th century, Canada’s forests were a significant carbon sink, but in recent decades this situation has reversed. As forest fires have become larger and more […]