Alberta’s climate change strategy will be shaped by a newly appointed panel made up of five experts—including representatives with links to two major Canadian energy companies.
Source: huffingtonpost.ca/
Author: Zi-Ann Lum
“Our government intends to take action,” Environment and Parks Minister Shannon Phillips said at a Friday news conference about the NDP government’s commitment to hold an “incredible conversation” to come up with an ambitious plan.
“Climate change is a threat we all face, affecting everything from our health, food production, and fresh water to biodiversity and our economy,” Phillips said in a statement.
Climate change panel members include:
- Angela Adams, Unifor’s director of education
- Linda Coady, Enbridge Inc.’s chief sustainability officer
- Stephanie Cairns, a consultant and Pembina Institute board member
- Gord Lambert, a consultant who recently retired as an advisor to Suncor’s executives on sustainability
In June, University of Alberta business professor Dr. Andrew Leach was tapped as chair. Leach wrote in Maclean’s that the panel’s mandate is to complete an overview of "greenhouse gas mitigation options."
“I am looking forward to hearing from Albertans, both in person and online,” said Leach in a statement Friday.
“The fact is there are no easy solutions to the climate change challenge. We need to ensure we provide government with sound advice to inform the choices that will be made.”
Pembina Institute executive director Ed Whittingham praised the announcement, calling the five-person panel a “well-balanced lineup of experts.”
The public will also be invited to weigh in via public information sessions beginning the week of Aug. 24. Input from First Nations and Metis communities, as well as the energy industry, will also be heard.
And for those who can’t attend sessions in-person, the province launched an online survey to collect feedback on key issues a provincial plan should focus on and review.
When asked about how the panel will work in concert with the province’s new royalty review panel, Phillips responded, “Very closely.”
Consultations are scheduled to continue to September. Phillips said the goal is to have an energy policy ready by late October or November, before the start of the UN climate conference in Paris at the end of the year.
Original Article
Source: huffingtonpost.ca/
Author: Zi-Ann Lum
No comments:
Post a Comment