logo
For some Yukoners, climate change is a key issue this federal election campaign

For some Yukoners, climate change is a key issue this federal election campaign

CBC17-04-2025

While topics like tariffs, affordability and housing have dominated conversations about the upcoming federal election, some Yukon voters say another issue should also be at the forefront — climate change and the environment.
"It seems to be something we're ignoring now," Haines Junction resident Julie Bauer said.
"I know there's other focuses but I think the environment has to be a priority, especially for our youth and for all of us…. We have to think about other things than just day-to-day stuff, we have to think about the future of our children."
Whitehorse resident Jennifer Staniforth also said it was a priority for her.
"The environment hasn't been talked about a lot and I would hope that that would be a big part of this election," Staniforth said.
"I think a clean, healthy planet is the best thing we can do for ourselves right now."
A federal government report in 2019 found that Canada, on average, was warming at double the global rate, with the North warming even faster than the rest of the country. Besides warmer days, symptoms of a changing climate have also included increased precipitation, warming and melting permafrost, higher water temperatures and more intense wildfire and flood seasons.
While climate change may seem like a standalone issue, Chrystal Mantyka-Pringle, a Whitehorse-based conservation planning biologist with the Wildlife Conservation Society, said it's interwoven with other topics.
"My perspective is, we want an MP that can … actually see that intrinsic connection between our economy, our social welfare issues and our environment because they're all interlinked," she said.
That's a reality that Yukon First Nations have been grappling with for years now, with traditional travel routes and harvest — including for chinook salmon — along with entire communities threatened by the impacts of climate change.
"It's really emotional when we talk about our homelands and when we talk about loss and damage because everything that is alive keeps us as First Nations people in our traditional territory alive," Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation elder Lorraine Netro previously said at a global climate summit.
The Yukon's capital city also knows the impact of climate change first-hand, having seen one of its main arteries into and out of the downtown core — Robert Service Way — blocked by a major landslide off a neighbouring escarpment in 2022.
"That slide was a wake-up call and a clear sign of the impacts of climate change on our community and our infrastructure," Mayor Kirk Cameron told reporters earlier this month.
The slide, and smaller ones in the years since, have cost the city millions of dollars for clean-up and the installation of safety barriers, but an even more expensive project lies ahead — permanently rerouting the road away from the escarpment.
The federal government is pitching in more than $45 million for the project via its Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund. Cameron said that kind of federal funding was "critical" for dealing with the triple-threat of climate change, aging infrastructure and a growing population, and that he would ensure the next federal government remains aware of that.
What candidates say
CBC Yukon asked the four candidates running for the territory's lone MP seat how they planned to address climate change during a forum Tuesday. Here's how they responded, with answers edited for clarity and length.
Ryan Leef (Conservative Party)
We believe in technology, not taxes. We saw the carbon tax didn't [have] any measurable impact on dealing with the climate issue, which is really a global issue and it just ultimately broke the backs of Canadians in terms of affordability of life. So our focus is going to be on investing in technology. If we utilize some of the ethical and the clean products that we have here in the country, extracting our own resources, we can reduce the emissions that are utilized by our reliance on other global partners. Climate change is not a Yukon-caused phenomenon, although we suffer from the effects of it far more than anyone else, so we do need to be conscious about climate issues, but we also can play a much bigger role in reducing global climate emissions with our technological advances in Canadian innovation.
Katherine McCallum (NDP)
Canadians are doing their part, but we can't keep relying on working Canadians to solve this enormous problem by themselves. And the way to do that is to make sure that the big polluters are paying for the damage that they're causing and, and they shouldn't be rewarded for the damage that they're causing. So we need to be taxing big oil and gas companies and making sure that that money isn't going offshore. We need to end the consumer carbon tax and instead put the onus on the biggest polluters in subsidies to the most profitable oil and gas companies. Put money in people's pockets by making homes more efficient and reinvesting in greener and renewable energies on the home front and, and making it easier for people and more affordable people to buy a zero-emissions vehicle and make their homes more energy efficient.
Brendan Hanley (Liberal Party)
Canada has an important role to play and to continue to play as a climate leader. And I'm glad to see among Mark Carney's many, many skills, he was also the UN envoy on climate change, including climate financing. So part of his vision and our vision is harnessing the markets to leapfrog into new energy infrastructure and develop more energy self-sufficiency, which we need to do anyway in the light of the U.S. tariffs, but also to accelerate the transition towards renewable energy. We also need to keep in mind emergency preparedness in the North. We also need to hold industrial polluters to account because we need to continue to bend the curve in emissions. I would say the consumer carbon tax did have an effect about 10 to 15 per cent of emissions reductions. We need to compensate for that on the industrial side.
Gabrielle Dupont (Green Party)
Clean energy transition — this is one of my priorities for this campaign. We do know that taxing the big emitters, it's three times more efficient than taxing consumers, taxing people. And I do not believe that the carbon tax in the Yukon was the right tool. And so when we do keep taxing the big emitters, the revenue that we're getting from this, we're using [it] to fund clean energy transition. And the Yukon, we're really not that far from being 100 per cent renewable. And I'm pretty sad that we actually missed the boat on projects like the Atlin hydro expansion because of a lack of commitment from the federal government. And so as a Green MP, these are the projects that I would champion as hard as I can, to get these projects out the door. This is exactly what we need to do for our clean energy transition in the Yukon so let's fund these projects.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Don't want to antagonize:' G7 protesters vow restraint, question if police will follow suit
'Don't want to antagonize:' G7 protesters vow restraint, question if police will follow suit

Calgary Herald

time27 minutes ago

  • Calgary Herald

'Don't want to antagonize:' G7 protesters vow restraint, question if police will follow suit

Article content Activists protesting the G7 gathering say they'll assemble peacefully, but some doubt police will refrain from violently suppressing their right to demonstrate. Article content An organizer with an alliance of 25 activist groups across the country that's bringing some of its members to Calgary said they avoid provoking police backlash, but might not confine their activities to three designated protest zones being set up for them in Calgary — near the airport, at Municipal Plaza and in Victoria Park. Article content Article content Article content 'Depending on the security situation, we might do a march and we'll see what the implications of leaving the designated zones are, but we don't want to put public safety at risk,' said Yasmeen Khan, North American vice-chair of the International League of Peoples' Struggle in Canada (ILPS). Article content Article content 'We should be able to bring a voice to the wider public but, at the same time, we don't want to antagonize.' Article content Police have said they have no legal mandate to confine protesters to the assigned zones, but add they won't tolerate law-breaking outside them. Article content Khan said she expects modest numbers from her alliance's groups to come to Calgary — maybe as few as 100, mostly activists from around Western Canada — though demonstrators from other groups as well as Calgary-based will add to those numbers. Article content They'll highlight a host of issues, including Indigenous struggles, housing, migrant and national liberation struggles, wages, climate change and international support for Israel's onslaught on Gaza. Article content Article content 'I don't think we're expecting thousands of people but we're hoping to bring together a political consciousness in Calgary,' she said, adding there's a simmering desire to join that movement in conservative Calgary. Article content 'There are people in the community who are waiting to come together, to be galvanized.' Article content Activists target the G7, said Khan, because they don't believe its leaders seek to address the problems facing regular people. Article content 'It's a sham sense of democracy and decision-making,' said Khan. Article content Activists will hold demonstrations and a 'people's forum' at Municipal Plaza from June 14 to 15, she said, and there could be other protests in the following days during the G7, which runs from June 15 to 17. Leaders from Canada, the U.S., the U.K., Germany, Italy and France, Japan and the European Union will gather at Kananaskis Village to seek consensus on peace and security, economic stability and the war in Ukraine.

'Don't want to antagonize:' G7 protestors vow restraint, question if police will follow suit
'Don't want to antagonize:' G7 protestors vow restraint, question if police will follow suit

Calgary Herald

timean hour ago

  • Calgary Herald

'Don't want to antagonize:' G7 protestors vow restraint, question if police will follow suit

Article content Activists protesting the G7 gathering say they'll assemble peacefully but some doubted police will refrain from violently suppressing their right to demonstrate. Article content An organizer with an alliance of 25 activist groups across the country that's bringing some of its members to Calgary said they avoid provoking police backlash but might not confine their activities to three designated protest zones being set up for them in Calgary located near the airport, at Municipal Plaza and in Victoria Park. Article content Article content Article content 'Depending on the security situation, we might do a march and we'll see what the implications of leaving the designated zones are but we don't want to put public safety at risk,' said Yasmeen Khan, North American vice-chair of the International League of Peoples' Struggle in Canada (ILPS). Article content Article content 'We should be able to bring a voice to the wider public but at the same time, we don't want to antagonize.' Article content Police have said they have no legal mandate to confine protestors to the assigned zones but add they won't tolerate law-outbreaking outside them. Article content Khan said she expects modest numbers from her alliance's groups to come to Calgary, maybe as few as 100 – mostly activists from around western Canada, though demonstrators from other groups as well as Calgary-based will add to those numbers. Article content They'll highlight a host of issues from Indigenous struggles, housing, migrant and national liberation struggles, wages, climate change and international support for Israel's onslaught on Gaza. Article content Article content 'I don't think we're expecting thousands of people but we're hoping to bring together a political consciousness in Calgary,' she said, adding there's a simmering desire to join that movement in conservative Calgary. Article content 'There are people in the community who are waiting to come together, to be galvanized.' Article content Activists target the G7, said Khan, because they don't believe its leaders seek to address the problems facing regular people. Article content 'It's a sham sense of democracy and decision-making,' said Khan. Article content Activists will hold demonstrations and a 'peoples' forum' at Municipal Plaza June 14-15,, she said, and there could be other protests in the days that follow during the G7, which runs from June 15 to 17 with leaders from Canada, the U.S., the UK, Germany, Italy and France, Japan and the European Union will be gathering at Kananaskis Village to come to consensus on peace and security, economic stability and the war in Ukraine.

Two First Nations working on roads to Ring of Fire don't support new mining law
Two First Nations working on roads to Ring of Fire don't support new mining law

Toronto Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Toronto Sun

Two First Nations working on roads to Ring of Fire don't support new mining law

Bill 5 seeks to speed up development, particularly mining projects Published Jun 09, 2025 • 1 minute read Two First Nations in and around the Ring of Fire that signed deals with the provincial government are speaking out against a new Ontario law. Aroland First Nation Chief Sonny Gagnon says his community objects to the law known as Bill 5, which seeks to speed up development, particularly mining projects. The legislation passed last week allows Ontario to suspend provincial and municipal laws by creating so-called special economic zones for certain projects it chooses. Ontario intends to name the mineral-rich Ring of Fire as the first such zone, but the law has created a firestorm of anger among many First Nations. Aroland signed a shared-prosperity agreement with the province in January for major upgrades to roads that lead to the Ring of Fire, but Gagnon says they have never given consent to mine the region. Marten Falls First Nation also has an agreement with the province as it leads the development of another proposed road to the area, and its chief says he cannot support the law as it is written _ though he hopes Ontario can correct course with consultation. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account Canada Sunshine Girls World Golf Editorial Cartoons

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store