ALBERTA

High and dry: Federal budget 2024 misses the mark on water-related investments

Retrieved on: 
Jeudi, avril 18, 2024

Forest fires in British Columbia are expected to begin earlier and last longer this year and severe multi-year droughts are forecast for the Prairies.

Key Points: 
  • Forest fires in British Columbia are expected to begin earlier and last longer this year and severe multi-year droughts are forecast for the Prairies.
  • In the lead-up to the federal government’s 2024 budget, there was hope for investments in water management and water-related infrastructure to help address some of these issues.

Fires and droughts

  • The budget is light on details — and critical infrastructure investments — regarding the management of fires and droughts.
  • But they are often politically contentious and have many social and environmental impacts that need to be weighed during the decision-making process.
  • Given the recurring jurisdictional spats between Ottawa and the provinces over water management issues, this lack of commitment to large-scale infrastructure is perhaps unsurprising.

Focus on emergency management

  • In contrast to Ottawa’s actions, Alberta recently dedicated funds in its provincial budget to address the urgent threat of a looming drought.
  • On the topic of fires, while the federal government acknowledged in early April the looming destructive wildfire season, the budget is focused exclusively on emergency management and firefighter training.
  • While it’s important to prepare, such a focus ignores an arguably more pressing problem — the lack of infrastructure required to provide the water for firefighting.

Floods

  • It did, however, propose almost $7 million over five years for the Meteorological Service of Canada’s early warning system for extreme weather events, with a focus on floods and storm surges.
  • However, this type of policy approach doesn’t address the root causes that result in the occurrence of floods; rather, it focuses on paying out for damages after the floods have happened.
  • Ultimately, what is perhaps most striking about the issue of floods in the 2024 budget is how little attention they received and how much of it may be buried under housing-related budget measures.

Housing and wastewater

  • The third major water-related aspect we examined in the 2024 budget concerned housing and water management in the built environment.
  • There were many welcome references in the budget about the need to invest in urban storm water and wastewater infrastructure.
  • This is definitely an important component in dealing with rapid growth and housing affordability issues in Canadian cities, but it will be critical for infrastructure investments to go beyond the status quo and incorporate novel storm-water systems and green infrastructure.

What still needs to be done

  • In the end, this budget did little to address the concerns many Canadians have about climate-related impacts and water security.
  • There must be investments in sustainable water-use programs and timely water measurements.
  • The above being said, infrastructure alone won’t solve the complex issues of climate-related water management.


Kerry Black receives funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. David Barrett receives funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, provincial research grants, and collaborates on projects receiving NSERC Alliance funding.

It is industry, not government, that is getting in the way of a ‘just transition’ for oil and gas workers

Retrieved on: 
Jeudi, avril 18, 2024

Canada’s oil and gas sector is in the throes of profound change driven by shifting consumer demand and global commitments to dramatically lower greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

Key Points: 
  • Canada’s oil and gas sector is in the throes of profound change driven by shifting consumer demand and global commitments to dramatically lower greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
  • But are industry and politicians sincere in their affection for oil and gas workers?
  • Or, are energy workers merely a convenient vehicle to shield the industry from change that many Canadians believe is inevitable?

Picket lines

  • We found the company used expanding pipeline capacity and Canada’s emission reduction policies to justify its push to force workers to take concessions.
  • The lockout came to an end in June 2020 when Local 594 members ratified an agreement with FCL.

“Just” transition?

  • Just this month federal Conservatives, conservative provincial governments and protesters came out strong against the increase to the Trudeau government’s signature climate policy — the price on carbon.
  • The Liberal government has faced significant backlash against its other climate policies as well, including the oil and gas emissions cap.
  • Conservatives position themselves as the voice of fossil fuel workers, who they cast as victims of carbon pricing and other federal environmental policies.
  • Shuttered factories and their laid-off employees are victims of Liberal anti-oil policies, industry proponents insist.

Questions unanswered

  • Time and again governments, local police and courts advanced the interests of industry over those of unionized workers.
  • Or, will the inevitable winding down of extractive fossil fuel industries lead to acrimonious labour relations and social injustice?
  • The path designed by powerful oil and gas interests is not one that puts workers or communities first.
  • Emily Eaton receives funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
  • Andrew Stevens receives funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and the University of Regina (U of R fund: Unifor Scholar in Labour Relations).

Earth Day: ‘Green muscle memory’ and climate education promote behaviour change

Retrieved on: 
Jeudi, avril 18, 2024

This year, organizers of Earth Day are calling for widespread climate education as a critical step in the fight against climate change.

Key Points: 
  • This year, organizers of Earth Day are calling for widespread climate education as a critical step in the fight against climate change.
  • A new report, released in time for global attention for Earth Day on April 22, highlights the impact of climate education on promoting behaviour change in the next generation.

How knowledge becomes ingrained

  • Teachers have become increasingly concerned about best practices for supporting their charges as young people express anxiety about environmental futures.
  • Similarly, Finnish researchers use biking as an analogy to describe the process by which knowledge becomes ingrained in people’s memory.
  • The bike model advocates ways of learning that consider knowledge, identity, emotions and world views.
  • More than half of the survey respondents were from Ontario (25 per cent) and Québec (29 per cent).

Challenges with climate education

  • However, inclusion of climate education in formal school curricula has come with its own set of challenges.
  • Educators in Ontario reported a lack of classroom resources as a barrier when integrating climate change education within the curriculum.
  • The United Nations has declared climate education “a critical agent in addressing the issue of climate change” as climate education increases across different settings and for various age groups.

Educators finding ways

  • More and more educators are taking steps to find ways to teach climate education in schools.
  • As an instructor for several undergraduate-level courses, Olsen focuses on equipping budding educators with the skills and knowledge to incorporate climate education in their classrooms.

All aspects of curricula

  • Embedding climate education into all aspects of curricula can take a variety of approaches in and outside of the classroom.
  • Environmental education has been packaged in different forms, including broadening school curricula with inclusion in science, but also subjects including English, math and art.


Preety Sharma is a public health and development consultant. As a freelance journalist, she covers climate change, public health and nutrition. Ayeshah Haque is a Clinical Content Specialist at the Association for Ontario Midwives.

An economist explains: Textbook economics is badly flawed when it comes to climate change

Retrieved on: 
Mercredi, avril 10, 2024

But economists are hardly infallible experts on the carbon tax and other fiscal measures implemented by governments.

Key Points: 
  • But economists are hardly infallible experts on the carbon tax and other fiscal measures implemented by governments.
  • While the carbon tax increase kicked in, the Alberta fuel tax was hiked by 13 cents the same day.
  • In other words, the carbon tax has been a blessing for Smith as she deflects attention away from her own government’s role in raising gas prices.

Double standards

  • For instance, some homeowners have blamed the carbon tax for higher electricity bills in Alberta, ignoring the fact that the carbon tax does not apply to the electricity sector.
  • Double standards abound on the carbon tax.
  • While protesters chant “Axe the tax,” they ignore that fossil fuel subsidies cost them more than the carbon tax.

Textbook economics backs carbon tax

  • As an economics instructor, a key lesson is that the carbon tax is the least costly method to address carbon emissions.
  • In my pedagogical paper on climate change, I refer to McGill University economist Chris Ragan, who states that the carbon tax is more efficient than regulation.
  • But the carbon tax incentivizes investment in new technologies to limit the tax payment.

The limits of textbook economics

  • The way textbook economics approaches climate change through externalities suggests it’s simply a minor aberration.
  • Energy and raw materials are ignored, which means that biophysical or ecological limits are disregarded in the pursuit of growth.
  • Keen argues that mainstream economics assumes 90 per cent of GDP will be unaffected by climate change.
  • In short, he argues, mainstream economics has been complicit in the existential crisis of climate change.

Radical solutions

  • But it may be too little too late, necessitating radical solutions beyond the carbon tax.
  • In this regard, Keen argues that carbon pricing is not enough, calling for carbon rationing.
  • This happens by going beyond textbook economics and technical jargon by highlighting the ecological and biophysical limits to growth.


I am not affiliated with any organization. Though, I have in the past done research assistance work for the Parkland Institute.

Shifts in how sex and gender identity are defined may alter human rights protections: Canadians deserve to know how and why

Retrieved on: 
Mercredi, avril 10, 2024

Recent education policy changes and protests about sex education reveal increasing concern and polarization over how sex and gender identity are taught in public schools in Canada.

Key Points: 
  • Recent education policy changes and protests about sex education reveal increasing concern and polarization over how sex and gender identity are taught in public schools in Canada.
  • They also expose the significant role now played by school boards in constructing the meaning of gender identity and gender expression.
  • Changes in how words and terms are used can impact our ability to know about people’s lives and protect their rights.
  • Significant shifts are taking place around how we define and understand sex and gender in education and public policy in Canada.

Sex, gender and law

  • Yet sex, gender identity and gender expression are not defined in human rights legislation in Canada.
  • They should be able to express their concerns and participate in open discussions about the meaning of words we share.

Changes in the definition of sex

  • The Charter of the United Nations prohibits sex discrimination.
  • The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights precludes discrimination based on sex.

Changes since 2018


Since 2018, the word sex is increasingly defined by the federal government as something that is “assigned at birth.” But there is no consistency across federal departments and agencies. Some continue to define sex as a biological question of male or female. Those that define sex as assigned at birth do not consistently explain how sex is assigned or by whom.

Conceptual shifts around word ‘woman’

  • Similar conceptual shifts are taking place around the word woman.
  • The word woman was formerly linked to sex and used to refer to female people.
  • Now, government departments including the Department of Justice increasingly use the word woman to refer to all people who identify as women.

Defining gender identity

  • When gender identity was added to federal human rights legislation, the Department of Justice defined gender identity as:
    “each person’s internal and individual experience of gender.
  • A person’s gender identity may or may not align with the gender typically associated with their sex.”
    “A person’s internal and deeply felt sense of being a man or woman, both or neither.
  • A person’s gender identity may or may not align with the gender typically associated with their sex.”

School boards define terms differently

  • Researchers have identified that secular boards across Ontario define gender identity and gender expression differently from one another.
  • Some school boards now define gender identity as something everyone has.

Data collection shifts away from sex towards gender

  • A shift away from sex and towards gender (identity) has occurred in data collection practices at the federal government level.
  • In 2018, the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat and the Department of Justice Canada recommended “ways to modernize how the Government of Canada handles information on sex and gender.” They recommended that “departments and agencies should collect or display gender information by default, unless sex information is specifically needed.” They used “sex” to refer to biological characteristics, and “gender” to refer to a social and personal identity.

Open discussions are overdue


As Canadian society shifts to accommodate the legal recognition of gender diversity, there will be tensions. Ultimately, courts will be tasked with deciding how some of those tensions are resolved, when sex, gender identity and gender expression are all protected in human rights laws. In the meantime, as a society, we need to openly and transparently grapple with some increasingly important questions:
First, how will foundational concepts such as sex, gender identity and gender expression be defined and given effect in education, law, public policy and beyond?
Second, how will tensions between experiences, interests and rights associated with sex and those associated with gender identity and/or gender expression be resolved?
Third, who is best placed to decide how these questions are answered in education, law, public policy and beyond?
Everyone who may be impacted by the answers to these questions should be included in the conversation.
Debra M Haak receives funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, the Canadian Bar Association Law for the Future Fund, and the Queen's University Faculty Association Fund for Scholarly Research.

Entos Pharmaceuticals to Present at the 2024 Bloom Burton & Co. Healthcare Investor Conference

Retrieved on: 
Mardi, avril 9, 2024

Edmonton, Alberta--(Newsfile Corp. - April 9, 2024) - Entos Pharmaceuticals, (Entos), a genetic medicines company pioneering the development of life-changing medicines to patients with its Fusogenix PLV nucleic acid delivery technology, will be participating in the 2024 Bloom Burton & Co. Healthcare Investor Conference, which will take place on April 16 and 17 at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.

Key Points: 
  • Edmonton, Alberta--(Newsfile Corp. - April 9, 2024) - Entos Pharmaceuticals, (Entos), a genetic medicines company pioneering the development of life-changing medicines to patients with its Fusogenix PLV nucleic acid delivery technology, will be participating in the 2024 Bloom Burton & Co. Healthcare Investor Conference, which will take place on April 16 and 17 at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.

Williams County Approves the Conditional Use Permit for Cerilon GTL North Dakota

Retrieved on: 
Jeudi, avril 4, 2024

Calgary, Alberta--(Newsfile Corp. - April 4, 2024) - Cerilon is pleased to announce Williams County's approval of the company's application for a Conditional Use Permit (CUP), an important next step in Cerilon GTL North Dakota's development.

Key Points: 
  • Calgary, Alberta--(Newsfile Corp. - April 4, 2024) - Cerilon is pleased to announce Williams County's approval of the company's application for a Conditional Use Permit (CUP), an important next step in Cerilon GTL North Dakota's development.
  • "We've worked hard to meet the County's high expectations for the project in its early phases of design and engineering," said Ron Opperman, CEO of Cerilon GTL.
  • Cerilon has proposed an innovative gas-to-liquids (GTL) facility that will transform natural gas into unique, high-performance synthetic products.
  • Cerilon GTL North Dakota is the first larger-scale, natural gas-fed GTL facility in North America.

PLHM Expands Presence in Alberta with Acquisition of a Clinic in Fort Saskatchewan and an Additional Virtual Presence Across Canada

Retrieved on: 
Jeudi, avril 4, 2024

Through a share purchase agreement, the first of these two acquisitions is a clinic in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, to provide additional wrap-around care services for the communities it supports.

Key Points: 
  • Through a share purchase agreement, the first of these two acquisitions is a clinic in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, to provide additional wrap-around care services for the communities it supports.
  • The other is an education and telehealth clinic that will expand our virtual footprint across Canada and leverage the benefits of this more extensive scale.
  • These acquisitions mark a significant milestone in the company's growth strategy and commitment to delivering high-quality healthcare services to patients across Canada.
  • The acquisition of these two clinics aligns with PLHM's mission to enhance healthcare accessibility and improve patient outcomes.

Cerilon and Chevron Enter into Technology Licensing Agreements for the Production of Superior-Quality Group III+ Base Oils and Ultra-Low Sulphur Diesel at its Gas-To-Liquids (GTL) Facility in Williams County, North Dakota

Retrieved on: 
Mercredi, mars 13, 2024

This milestone enables the company to utilize Chevron's proven suite of Hydroprocessing technologies at its foundational Gas-To-Liquids (GTL) facility in Williams County, North Dakota.

Key Points: 
  • This milestone enables the company to utilize Chevron's proven suite of Hydroprocessing technologies at its foundational Gas-To-Liquids (GTL) facility in Williams County, North Dakota.
  • "We're impressed by Chevron's technical capabilities, particularly this technology suite, which has been proven in GTL projects around the globe," said Nico Duursema, CEO of Cerilon.
  • Cerilon's innovative GTL facility will transform natural gas into unique, high-performance synthetic products, including ultra-low sulphur diesel, naphtha and industry-leading Group III+ base oils, top tier products with superior qualities and uses.
  • Cerilon is establishing global, industry-leading partnerships to deliver this pioneering GTL facility, which will be followed by replicated GTL facilities.

Kudos Unveils Group eCards to Elevate Employee Recognition

Retrieved on: 
Mercredi, mars 13, 2024

Strengthening Connections, Enhancing Recognition: Kudos Launches Group eCards to Celebrate Employee Milestones and Achievements

Key Points: 
  • Calgary, Alberta--(Newsfile Corp. - March 13, 2024) - Kudos®, a leading employee recognition & rewards, culture, and analytics platform, today announced the launch of its Group eCards feature, designed to enhance workplace celebrations and appreciation.
  • "Up until now, organizations have struggled with using different products to meet their goals around peer-to-peer recognition, rewards and eCards," said Muni Boga, President and CEO at Kudos.
  • "With the introduction of Group eCards in Kudos, we're helping leaders strengthen team bonds and enhance the employee experience by making recognition more personal, inclusive, and accessible for everyone."
  • Kudos Group eCards complement the platform's popular suite of recognition and engagement tools, including Peer-to-Peer Recognition, Rewards, Employee Nomination Programs and the newly released Pulse Surveys .