Ottawa is stepping into the breach to bankroll some of the climate change programs left after Premier Doug Ford ended Ontarioâs cap-and-trade environmental alliance with Quebec and California.Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna on Thursday announced that small- and medium-sized Ontario businesses as well as community organizations and non-profit groups will soon be able to apply directly for funding.Read more:Tories scrap cap-and-trade plan in order to reduce gas pricesOntarioâs environmental commissioner slams Ford government over âguttedâ climate change policies âSchools, communities, and hospitals are all committed to climate action and now theyâre left in a lurch so weâve said weâre willing to work with them directly now with this money,â McKenna said in an interview.âOf course we would have liked to work with the provincial government both on fighting pollution and tackling climate change,â the minister said.âThey took a different path â they made pollution free; they cancelled hundreds of projects in communities across Ontario,â she said.âTheyâre clearly not committed to climate action, but Ontarians are.âThe federal money, which comes from a national $1.4-billion âlow carbon leadership fund,â will help pay for some of the programs that were scrapped after Fordâs government abandoned the cap-and-trade accord with Quebec and California.This would include $100 million for retrofitting schools to make them more energy efficient and a similar $64 million initiative for hospitals.McKenna said details of Ottawaâs plan are still being finalized.âThere was an agreement with the Ontario government that was cancelled so we will be announcing soon how folks can apply,â she said.âThe government of Ontario cancelled projects that were helping individuals, universities, colleges, communities and businesses reduce poll ...
|