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Trudeau to seek industry, indigenous input to define climate plan


These translations are done via Google Translate

OTTAWA (Reuters) – Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, in his first major climate change speech this year, will reach out on Monday to businesses, indigenous groups and citizens for help in defining his ambitious plan to cut carbon emissions, a senior government official said.

During his campaign for re-election last year, Trudeau pledged to put Canada on a path to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, but the details of how to attain that goal have yet to be hammered out.

The speech comes just a week after Teck Resources Ltd withdrew an application to build a C$20.6 billion (11.98 billion pounds) Frontier oil sands mine in Alberta, citing in part the country’s need to reconcile resource development and climate change.

“In the coming year, we want to hear from you on how to innovate and transform our economy to keep good jobs here and create new ones,” reads an excerpt of Trudeau’s speech, which will be delivered on Monday to mining executives meeting at an annual conference in Toronto.

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“We will be launching pathways soon so that industries, citizens, indigenous peoples can inform Canada’s clean transition,” reads a portion of the speech shared by a senior government official.

Unhappiness with the government’s energy and pipeline policy cost Trudeau’s Liberals all their seats in Alberta and Saskatchewan — the heart of Canada’s so-called oil patch — in last year’s election.

In recent weeks, indigenous groups across the country have blocked rail lines and roads in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en in British Columbia, who are fighting to stop a gas line from being built across their land.

In the speech, Trudeau will argue that “environmental policy is not just good for the planet, but it’s also good for business,” the source said.



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