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British Columbia

Rebates, industry incentives at centre of B.C.'s long-term climate plan

B.C. has unveiled its long-awaited plan for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, which calls for shifting homes, transportation and industry away from fossil fuels and into greener energy.

Clean B.C. strategy redirects revenue from carbon tax into incentives for industry to go greener

Government announcements have already been made to retrofit buildings for energy savings and to back a transition to zero-emission vehicles. ( Go Ultra Low/Getty Images)

B.C. has unveiled its long-awaited plan for reducinggreenhouse gas emissions.

The plan, called Clean B.C., requires all new buildingsto be net-zero energy by 2032, and all new cars soldto be zero-emission by 2040.

It also redirects revenue from the carbon tax into incentives like rebates for the province's biggest industries to move to cleaner operations.

"We want to make shifts: shifts in our home, shifts in our vehicles and shifts in our industry away from fossil fuels and into green energy," Premier John Horgantold reporters Wednesday.

"This is an environment plan, a climate plan, but it's also an economic strategy for B.C. going forward."

B.C. Premier John Horgan walks into the conference room at the Vancouver Public Library to announce the CleanBC plan on Wednesday. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

Horgan and Green Party Leader Andrew Weaver revealed the framework in Vancouver, joined by Environment Minister George Heyman and Energy Minister Michelle Mungall.

The climate plan is part of the province's goal to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 40 per cent by 2030, 60 per cent by 2040 and 80 per cent by 2050.

The reductions outlined in Wednesday's plan, however, only fulfil 75 per cent of that 2030 target.

The province said the remaining 25 per cent will be worked out over the next 18 to 24 months.

Major targets: cleaner buildings, cars

Cleaner cars and cleaner buildings as well as incentives for people to afford the shift were highlights of the plan.

It said every building built in B.C. will have to be "net-zero-energy ready" by 2032, meaningefficient enough that their total energy needs could be met with renewable energy sources like solar panels.

As previously announced, B.C. is also allocating $400 million to support retrofits and upgrades to existing homes and office buildings, including incentives for homeowners to pay for renovations to things like windows and heat pumps.

For instance, the plan highlights a rebate of up to $1,200 for homeowners who replace electric heating with a heat pump and$2,000 for those whoreplace anoil, propane, or natural gas heating with a heat pump.

A Clean Communities fund will also be available to remote communities, so residents can apply for grants to upgrade existing housing in their neighbourhoods.

"We're not anticipating the public will be able to [afford to] make this change on their own," Horgan said.

How just 2.5 degrees warming will change B.C.

7 years ago
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CBCs Johanna Wagstaffe explains how climate change will transform the province by 2050.

The province has a target of improving 1.5 per cent of every building in B.C. by 2030 or 16,000 households a year.

As for transportation, the plan says every car sold in B.C. will need to be zero-emission by 2040 as announced by Horgan last month. The plan, again, offered incentives for people to afford the switch.

Thirty per cent of all sales of new light-duty cars and trucks are expected to be zero-emission vehicles by 2030, rising to 100 per cent by 2040.

Industry incentive

A portion of B.C.'s carbon tax, paid by industry, will be saved and redirected into incentives for cleaner operations for industries like mining aluminum and oil and gas.

Clean electricity will also be provided to "planned natural gas production in the Peace region."

In October, LNG Canada announced its $40-billion LNG project in Kitimat was going ahead.

To help ensure the project moved forward, Horgan's government also offered an exemption on provincial sales tax related to construction costs.

According to information provided by the province, LNG Canada's plant would be the least greenhouse gas-intensive large LNG facility in the world.

Premier John Horgan, right, announced the province's new targets for zero-emission vehicles with Green Party Leader Andrew Weaver at his side. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

Weaver slammed the project after its approval, saying it would clash with the province's climate goals.

Clean business welcome

The Green leader, who worked as a climate scientist before transitioning to politics, struck a different tone on Wednesday.

"This isn't a plan to make people spend a bunch of taxes and hurt people's take-home pay," he said. "It isabout sending a message to the broad market in B.C. and internationally that B.C. is going to rise to the challenge: 'We welcome business in B.C., but that business will be clean business.'"

We welcome business in B.C., but that business will be clean business.- B.C. Green Party Leader Andrew Weaver

Weaver also addressed the 25 per cent gap in the plan.

"The answer is, yes, we're only 75 per cent of the way there, but look what we've accomplished in doing that," he said.

Horgan's minority NDP government is supported in the legislature by the B.C. Green Party.

Pembina Institute spokeswoman Karen Tam Wu has said B.C. currently emits about 63 megatonnes of greenhouse gas emissions annually and its goal is to get that number down to about 13 megatonnes by 2050.

With files from the Canadian Press