
G7 leaders sign joint statements on six subjects as summit wraps without communiqué
CTV's Colton Praill reports on promises Prime Minister Carney has made to support Ukraine, after G7 meeting with Zelenskyy.
CTV's Colton Praill reports on promises Prime Minister Carney has made to support Ukraine, after G7 meeting with Zelenskyy.
The leaders of the G7 nations are wrapping up their annual summit in Alberta today with a series of joint statements on issues ranging from transnational repression and migrant smuggling to AI and quantum computing.
As expected, the seven world leaders did not sign on to a joint communiqué, the lengthy statement outlining shared views that is typical at the end of G7 summits.
Instead, the statements are broken down by subjects — and notably there is no statement about Russia's ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
The G7 leaders did release a statement Monday evening calling for a de-escalation of hostilities in the Middle East in response to continued fighting between Israel and Iran.
A wider group of signatories, which includes Australia, India and South Korea, are committing to work together to invest in responsible critical minerals projects.
Australia, India, Mexico, South Korea and South Africa also signed on with the G7 to a wildfire charter that calls for co-operation to prevent, fight and recover from devastating fires.
This is a breaking update. Below is The Canadian Press' earlier copy...
KANANASKIS -- Prime Minister Mark Carney outlined $4.3 billion in new support for Ukraine's defence as he met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Alberta on Tuesday.
The Prime Minister's Office said that sum includes $2 billion for the purchase and donation of weapons and materiel like drones, ammunition and armoured vehicles -- funding that Canada will count toward its NATO defence spending target.
Canada is lending Ukraine $2.3 billion to help the embattled country rebuild its infrastructure.
The Prime Minister's Office said the loan will be repaid by interest collected on Russian assets frozen in Europe.
Canada also announced a new sanctions package targeting Russia's shadow fleet and energy revenues.
Carney, who is serving as the G7 summit host this year, invited Zelenskyy to the meeting and has said Canada intends to make Ukraine's defence a central aspect of the discussions.
As the two met on Tuesday morning, Carney condemned 'in the strongest terms' the latest round of Russian attacks, which Zelenskyy said targeted civilian infrastructure, including housing.
'This underscores the importance of standing in total solidarity with Ukraine, with the Ukrainian people, and we had a discussion last night amongst G7 leaders Γǰ We underscored the importance of using maximum pressure against Russia, who has refused to come to the table,' Carney said.
Twelve people were killed and more than 130 injured when Kyiv was bombarded overnight with 32 missiles and more than 440 drones, Zelenskyy said -- the deadliest attack on the capital this year.
'It's a big tragedy for us and we need support from our allies,' he said.
'We are ready for the peace negotiations, unconditional ceasefire. I think it's very important, but for this we need pressure.'
The U.K. announced Tuesday a new package of sanctions targeting a number of Russian ships involved in transporting oil as part of the so-called shadow fleet.
Ottawa's sanctions target 77 individuals and 39 entities in Russia, and also list 201 vessels it says Russia is using to evade sanctions by transporting oil, natural gas and weapons.
The Canadian government included the $2 billion in military donations to Ukraine in its updated defence spending calculations announced earlier this month.
The Liberals outlined plans on June 9 to rapidly scale up defence spending to the equivalent of two per cent of GDP - a target that Canada has agreed to for over a decade but has never actually met.
Carney cited that plan in a Tuesday morning meeting with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte.
He said Canada is 'stepping up to meet our commitments and (I) look forward to defining those new responsibilities and capabilities.'
Rutte said that with Canada and Portugal promising to boost spending, all NATO countries are expected to reach the alliance's two per cent spending target in 2025. The alliance is set to meet next week in The Hague, where leaders are set to discuss plans to raise the target to five per cent of GDP.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is to meet with Carney late Tuesday afternoon after attending various meetings, including a discussion of energy sovereignty with leaders from Brazil, South Africa and Mexico.
Modi's visit has prompted angry protests from Sikh separatist groups. In 2023 and 2024, former prime minister Justin Trudeau and the RCMP said there was evidence linking agents of the Indian government to the murder of Canadian Sikh separatist activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Surrey, B.C., in June 2023.
Last October, RCMP Commissioner Mike Duheme said the police force had evidence linking Indian government officials to other crimes in Canada, including extortion, coercion and homicide.
The G7 summit's second and final day went ahead without U.S. President Donald Trump, who left the talks ahead of schedule on Monday.
Trump said he left early to deal with the escalating violence in the Middle East. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent remained in Kananaskis as the U.S. delegation's lead.
Speaking to reporters on Air Force 1 Monday evening as he returned to Washington, Trump was asked whether he talked to anyone at the summit about his previous comments about making Canada a U.S. state.
'I think it's a much better deal for Canada, but you know, it's up to them,' Trump responded.
He said if Canada doesn't join the U.S., it will have to pay 'a lot of tariffs and things' and said Ottawa would have to pay $71 billion to be part of the 'Iron Dome' -- an apparent reference to the Golden Dome, a missile defence system Trump has proposed for the U.S.
Trump said Ottawa and Washington may make a separate deal on the Golden Dome.
With files from Sarah Ritchie in Ottawa
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 17, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
32 minutes ago
- CTV News
Teck receives provincial certificate to extend B.C. Interior copper mine
Teck's Highland Valley Copper mine is pictured in British Columbia's interior, Sunday, March 26, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward Vancouver-based mining company Teck Resources says it has received an environmental assessment certificate from the B.C. government to extend the life of the Highland Valley Copper Mine. Teck says in a release that the positive decision supports the extension for Canada's largest copper mine. The mine is located about 50 kilometres southwest of Kamloops, B.C. Teck president Jonathan Price says in a statement that site preparation work is expected to start shortly along with work to secure additional required permits, with a final construction decision by Teck's board of directors expected later this year. Price says the decision will not only support the extension, but will strengthening the North America critical minerals supply chain and contribute to jobs and economic activity. The company says the project is expected to create roughly 2,900 jobs during construction and support 1,500 jobs once in operation. This report by Chuck Chiang, The Canadian Press, was first published June 17, 2025.


CTV News
32 minutes ago
- CTV News
Environment minister says consumer rebates for EVs will return
Julie Dabrusin, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, speaks in the National Press Theatre in Ottawa on Thursday, June 12, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick OTTAWA — The federal government intends to bring back consumer rebates for electric vehicles but doesn't yet quite know what they'll look like, Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin said on Tuesday. The federal government launched its rebate program — the Incentives for Zero-Emission Vehicles program or iZEV, — in 2019, but it ran out of funding earlier this year, leading Ottawa to pause the program. Speaking to The Canadian Press while leaving the House of Commons — where she spent the better part of question period fending off Conversative criticisms of Ottawa's EV mandate — Dabrusin said a renewed consumer rebate is something being worked on. 'Will it be named, iZEV? That I can't tell you. But there will be a consumer rebate,' Dabrusin said. The iZEV program offered up to $5,000 off the cost of a new electric vehicle. Between May 2019 and January 2025, the federal government spent nearly $3 billion on the EV rebate program for more than half a million new passenger vehicles. The Liberal platform during the election suggested it would look for a way to reintroduce the $5,000 rebate program. Conservatives spent Tuesday in Ottawa calling for the mandate to be scrapped, citing concerns about an auto sector threatened by U.S. tariffs, and debating an opposition motion to compel the government to 'immediately end their ban on gas-powered vehicles.' 'Right now (the Liberals) have a mandate in place that makes it so that Canadians will have to buy EVs. But that does not fit the needs of Canadian families,' said Lethbridge MP Rachel Thomas during question period. 'If the Liberal government is truly going to stand with auto workers, then stop making the very vehicles that they're producing illegal.' Canada's electric vehicle mandate requires all new light-duty passenger vehicles sold to be zero-emissions by 2035. Sales of used gas-powered vehicles will still be allowed after 2035. Plug-in hybrid vehicles would also be allowed for sale. 'It's been in place since 2023. I don't see why the Conservatives believe we need to change it in the face of what we're facing with the U.S. tariffs on the auto industry,' Dabrusin told The Canadian Press following question period. Canada's auto manufacturers have grown on their calls for the government to repeal the mandate, as EV sales dropped in early 2025 as the rebates ended. Electric vehicles remain more expensive than their gas-powered equivalents. The first quarter of 2025 saw zero-emissions vehicles represent only 8.11 per cent of all new vehicle sales in Canada — a drop from the 16.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2024, according to data from Statistics Canada. On a monthly basis through 2024, the share of EVs among new vehicle sales never dropped below 10.65 per cent, and peaked at 18.29 per cent in December. In April of 2025, the most recent data from StatCan, EV sales dropped to 7.53 per cent of all new vehicles off of Canadian lots. Beginning in 2026, the government's EV mandate requires at least 20 per cent of new light-duty vehicles offered for sale in that year be zero-emission. That share rises each year until it reaches 100 per cent in 2035. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 17, 2025.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Edmonton may revise zoning bylaw to reduce mid-block multi-family units
A number of Edmonton city councillors are in favour of amending the city's contentious zoning bylaw, in one way by reducing the number of allowable units in new multi-family buildings, from eight to six. The zoning bylaw — a year-and-a-half old — allows developers to build eight-plexes in neighbourhoods across the city. The revised zoning bylaw that went into effect in January 2024, reflects the city's goal to create more housing types and denser neighourhoods. Michael Janz, Ward papastew councillor, raised a motion at the city's urban planning committee meeting Tuesday, to cap the number of units in the middle of a block. "In the corners, you can still build bigger units but for the mid-block, it's a recognition that there are greater impacts on your neighbours mid-block," Janz told CBC News. He said 80 per cent of the complaints he receives about infill have been about mid-block units. "We want to see more density in the nodes and corridors, more density in the priority growth areas, more density on corners, not necessarily the unit maximum in a mid-block area." The committee voted in favour of the motion, which goes before a public hearing June 30 for debate, along with other suggested amendments to the zoning bylaw. But other councillors, not members of the urban planning committee, oppose the change at this time. Coun. Anne Stevenson said it's still too early to gauge the outcome of developments. "I'm not sure exactly which problems we're trying to solve with this. I know that there are concerns around parking," Stevenson told CBC News Tuesday. "At this point we have a very, very small sample size of units that have actually been completed and occupied. So I don't think at this point we know how those will work, what impacts they'll have." Zoning bylaw update The committee was discussing a report that provided an update on developments over the past five years. It shows the city issued 555 development permits in 2024 for housing, resulting in 2,403 new residential dwelling units. More than half of the approved units were for row housing, the report says. The number of housing units approved in 2024 doubled from 2023, the report shows. "Since 2019 there has been an increase in all forms of multi-dwelling housing, including backyard, semi-detached and row housing developments," the report says. Members of the public spoke at the urban planning committee, some in support and some in opposition to limiting the number of units. Jan Hardstaff, a resident of Belgravia, said the rate of development over the past year has been overwhelming to communities. "There has been a surge in eight-plexes are not compatible mid-block to surrounding development," Hardstaff told the committee. "They are alarmed, anxious and angry at what they are seeing, and they are experiencing real negative impacts."