logo
Edmonton city council, business leaders talk tariff strategy as administrators review contracts

Edmonton city council, business leaders talk tariff strategy as administrators review contracts

CBC05-02-2025

Promised tariffs on Canadian goods may have been paused, but efforts in Edmonton to prepare for them are ramping up.
Edmonton Mayor Amarjeet Sohi said during a city council meeting Tuesday that he and Eddie Robar, the city manager, met with the heads of the Edmonton Chamber of Commerce and the economic development agency Edmonton Global on Monday night to discuss the issue.
They plan to call a meeting with chief executive officers from other economic development agencies and organizations, including the Edmonton International Airport, Epcor, the Edmonton Screen Industries Office and Explore Edmonton to discuss diversification, supply chains, infrastructure investment and interprovincial trade advocacy.
Sohi said he will also be convening a meeting with the chair of the Edmonton police commission to discuss further work combating the illicit drug crisis.
"I hope the message today is clear: that we are all working together to approach the situation with the seriousness it requires and the collaboration it requires," he said.
The mayor said city council should keep encouraging Edmontonians to buy from local companies.
"Every local purchase is a vote of confidence in our local economy and supports local jobs," he said.
Effects of tariffs on City of Edmonton
City manager Eddie Robar said the promised tariffs are expected to be "highly disruptive" to Edmonton and regional economies, potentially affecting spending, trade flows, pricing and gross domestic product.
Uncertainty could dampen business investment, lead businesses to relocate, and drive people and businesses to stockpile goods, he said.
He said tariffs and retaliatory tariffs would have far-reaching effects on many aspects of the city's budget.
The weaker Canadian dollar has already led to higher costs for transactions in U.S. dollars, he said, and increased costs for lumber or steel could drive up housing costs.
Robar said city administrators are reviewing contracts with U.S. companies and looking at ways of mitigating cost increases.
Mayors to meet Thursday
Sohi said he will be travelling to Ottawa on Wednesday and will be meeting on Thursday with the Federation of Canadian Municipalities' (FCM) Big City Mayors' Caucus, a group of representatives from Canada's biggest cities.
He said the group will be developing a united municipal strategy and meeting with federal ministers.
The FCM, which released a statement strongly condemning the U.S. tariffs on Feb. 1., intends to ramp up its efforts to build support among U.S. mayors, Robar said.
Opportunities for businesses
Doug Griffiths, president and CEO of the Edmonton Chamber of Commerce, said work is underway between chambers of commerce in large cities to eliminate trade barriers between provinces.
He told city council the chamber has been having a conversation about identifying Canadian goods on store shelves.
Griffiths said the tariff situation is a crisis but also an opportunity that shouldn't be wasted.
"This is the perfect opportunity for this city to start to evaluate its economic opportunities and achieve its full economic potential," he said.
Malcolm Bruce, CEO of Edmonton Global, said if a large federal assistance program arrives in response to tariffs, some of that money should go toward making the Edmonton region more attractive for international investment.
Councillors spoke at Tuesday's meeting about the importance of being united and working together to find solutions.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canada's clean energy investment slows but momentum could surge with new power deals
Canada's clean energy investment slows but momentum could surge with new power deals

National Observer

timean hour ago

  • National Observer

Canada's clean energy investment slows but momentum could surge with new power deals

Canada's steady, growing investment in clean power over the past decade slowed in 2024 with a drop-off in renewable energy plant construction, according to the latest International Energy Agency (IEA) figures. But in the face of heightened geopolitical uncertainty — and with most of the country's provinces planning to award deals this year to build more power plants and infrastructure — the Canadian green transition could quickly pick up pace again, a leading think-tank says. Capital spending on power generation in Canada between 2021-25 averaged US$7.3 billion a year — $5.3 billion of which went into renewables projects, the IEA stated in its 10th World Energy Investment report. The remaining $2 billion was split between new fossil fuel and nuclear developments. Clean energy spending numbers in the country are up compared to 2016-2021, when renewables saw $3.3 billion in capital expenditure, while fossil and nuclear saw $1 billion and $1.2 billion invested, respectively. The Canadian data also reflects the accelerating global shift away from oil, gas and coal, which is expected to see $1.1 trillion invested in 2025, while renewables, nuclear, grids, storage, e-fuels, and electrification are on course to reach a record $2.2 trillion spend. 'Today's investment trends clearly show a new Age of Electricity is drawing nearer,' said Fatih Birol, executive director of the IEA, as the report was released online lastThursday. "A decade ago, global investments in fossil fuels were 30 per cent higher than those in electricity generation, grids and storage. This year, electricity investments are set to be some 50 per cent higher than the total amount being spent bringing oil, natural gas and coal to market.' Birol noted spending on low-carbon power generation has almost doubled over the past five years, with solar power investment alone forecast to hit $450 billion in 2025, making it the 'single largest item in the global energy investment inventory.' Battery storage investments are also climbing rapidly, he said, with the IEA expecting spending to surge past $65 billion this year. A Canadian green 'gold rush' ahead? Evan Pivnick, Clean Energy Canada's clean energy program manager, said the drop in construction of solar and wind farms in Canada over the past year is disappointing. However, the 'bigger theme' in the IEA data is the growth of renewables share in the country's energy mix, which rose from 27.6 per cent in 2016-2020 to 36.6 per cent in 2021-2025, he added. Given that almost every province and territory is planning to hold a new power procurement round this year — where governments allocate future production capacity on the grid — conditions could exist for a renewables 'gold rush,' Pivnick said. 'The focus should be on interprovincial powe grids and interties - between Ontario and Quebec and Quebec and Atlantic Canada and between Alberta and BC,' says Clean Energy Canada's Evan Pivnick. 'Renewables are the cheapest form of new energy and prices continue to fall. We have historically been an oil-producing nation, but we have unbelievable renewable energy resources in wind and solar, all backed up by a world-class hydropower network,' he said. Canada has some singular challenges, including a vast geography with 13 different energy grids, Pivnick noted. 'But I think we are entering a new chapter in our energy transition.' Pivnik said the IEA data also reveals striking similarities between the energy transition in Canada and much of the rest of the world. One is underinvestment in transmission, which will hinder bringing new power online and getting it to industrial, commercial and residential consumers. Another is that energy security is becoming a major motivation in all national energy policy thinking. The IEA's Birol referred to it as the 'new main driver' of investment in power generation. 'Building renewable energy projects is the best way to make Canada's energy more secure and protect the country's electricity prices from fluctuations in global markets and political dynamics," said Pivnik. Canada's national renewables build-out has become sluggish in the last few years, primarily because Alberta — the country's erstwhile clean-energy powerhouse with over 10,000 MW of installed wind and solar — in 2022 imposed a moratorium on renewables projects. Nationwide solar and wind build down Nationwide, a mere 314 MW of solar power was switched on last year, down from 765 MW the year before, taking total plant capacity to 4,000 MW, according to figures from the C anadian Renewable Energy Association, an industry body. Wind power fared little better, with the installation of 1,434 MW of turbines in 2024, down from 1,774 MW the year before, expanding the fleet to a total 18,434 MW. The average yearly investment in Canada's electricity network fell slightly in 2021-2025 compared to the previous five years, the IEA found, to $4.1 billion from $4.2 billion. The same was seen globally as capital spending on grids, currently at around $400 billion a year, is not keeping pace with spending on generation and electrification, the agency said. Pivnick believes new transmission infrastructure should be top of the list for the new Liberal government's so-called 'nation-building' projects plan. 'The focus should be on interprovincial grids and interties - between Ontario and Quebec and Quebec and Atlantic Canada and between Alberta and BC,' Pivnick said. Power connections like these are the most cost-effective way to enhance Canada's ability to build more clean energy capacity in the provinces and distribute the country's energy resources to the regions that need them most, he added. Globally, China, far and away, led the energy investment tables with a forecast $874 billion to be spent this year, of which $627 billion will go into renewables projects — as much as the EU and US combined. The Asian superpower's share of worldwide renewables spending has risen from a quarter to almost a third over the past 10 years, based on a portfolio of technologies including solar, wind, hydropower, nuclear, batteries and EVs. Declining spending on new oil Capital spending on oil production is foreseen falling six per cent globally, while the nuclear sector's investment renaissance is expected to result in expenditure growing 50 per cent in 2025 to $75 billion. The rampant rise in worldwide electricity demand has also continued to fuel investment in coal, led by China, with the construction of nearly 100,000 MW of new lignite-fired power plants given the green-light. The IEA report noted that energy sector spending patterns were 'very uneven globally' with many developing economies struggling to get capital for energy infrastructure. Africa, though it is home to 20 per cent of the world's population accounts for just two per cent of global clean energy investment. Birol said: 'Investment flows are not yet on track to deliver on the renewable and efficiency goals agreed at COP28' in Dubai, UAE, which finished with a declaration stating the conference marked the 'beginning of the end' of the fossil fuel era. 'The annual investment required in renewable power still needs to double to achieve a tripling of installed renewable capacity by 2030, accompanied by rising spending on grids, storage and other forms of flexibility to ensure secure and cost-effective utilization of this capacity.'

There is no such thing as "decarbonized oil"
There is no such thing as "decarbonized oil"

National Observer

timean hour ago

  • National Observer

There is no such thing as "decarbonized oil"

It takes a lot to make Simon Donner lose his cool. The co-chair of the feds' advisory group on climate policy has a daily practice of swimming in the Pacific and braves the frigid water all winter long. But he couldn't bear the blather about 'decarbonized oil' spilling from the first ministers' meeting this week. The prime minister and premiers emerged from their meeting in Saskatoon last Monday and jointly declared they would 'work urgently to get Canadian natural resources and commodities to domestic and international markets, such as critical minerals and decarbonized Canadian oil and gas by pipelines, supported by the private sector….' Donner took to social media to denounce the whole notion of 'decarbonized oil' as 'Orwellian.' It was strong language from the co-chair of the federal Net-Zero Advisory Body (NZAB). Donner is a climate scientist at UBC studying oceans and the intersection of climate science and policy. In that role, he gets to call the fouls as he sees them. But when people accept official government advisory roles, their criticisms usually devolve into gracious gibberish. So, it was refreshing to hear Donner push back on the statement by Carney et al. The whole idea is just plain 'silly,' he said. There is no such thing as 'decarbonized oil' — 'Oil contains carbon and emits CO2 when combusted.' Oil is, after all, a hydrocarbon. Along with methane gas and coal, the combustion of these fossil fuels is the primary driver of climate change. You already knew that, I'm sure. But the reason it's important to spell it out is that you're in the minority. Everyone knows there's a conflict between Big Oil and the greenies. But after decades of climate denial, online disinformation and general gaslighting, there is still widespread confusion about the most basic facts — just under half of Canadians pick out 'burning fossil fuels' even when given a list of possible sources most responsible for climate change. The marketing spin about 'decarbonized oil,' isn't new. The oil and gas industry and various agencies were talking about carbon capture on oil production last century. More recently, Natural Resources Canada published a Roadmap for the Decarbonization of Canada's Oil and Gas Sector in the Trudeau years. The nonsensical term is a close cousin to the attempts at marketing deep offshore drilling in the Atlantic as 'net-zero.' And adjacent to the most brazen branding effort to date — so-called 'ethical oil.' Decarbonized oil doublespeak may not be new but it was jarring coming from the mouth of Prime Minister Mark Carney, who has an undeniable grasp of the impacts of hydrocarbons. @ writes for @ The decarbonized doublespeak may not be new but it was jarring coming from the mouth of our new PM, who has an undeniable grasp of the impacts of hydrocarbons but nevertheless talked about 'decarbonized barrels' at the press conference following the first ministers' meeting. And it was particularly painful considering the venue — a province under a state of emergency where more than 15,000 people have fled wildfires. Extended families are crammed into single hotel rooms and sleeping in parking lots. While the first ministers discussed their nation-building plans in Saskatoon, a group of evacuees held a protest in the city demanding more resources for firefighting and evacuation support. It is still only Spring, but over 33,000 Canadians have already been forced to evacuate. John Vaillant, the author of Fire Weather relayed a startling conversation this week: the CEO of Red Cross Canada told him that when he started with the organization 17 years ago, 'eighty per cent of our work was outside Canada. Now, eighty per cent of our work is inside the country.' The early-season heatwave and fire conditions on the Prairies are 'at least five times more likely than they would be in a world without climate change,' according to attribution scientists. 'These conditions, which set the stage for dangerous wildfires, will only become more frequent and more severe if we continue burning fossil fuels,' said Dr. Kristina Dahl, VP of Science at Climate Central. The contrast was too much for another member of NZAB. ''Decarbonized oil and gas' does not exist,' wrote Catherine Abreu. '[It is] a complete contradiction in terms, and a dangerous lie that Canadian government after Canadian government has tried to spin under the spell of industry lobbying.' It may be too early to tell who's doing the spinning and what kind of spell they're casting. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith sounded positively enthusiastic about an emerging 'grand bargain' to satisfy the demands of the oil and gas industry. But some political watchers suspect Mark Carney is spinning a political web of his own. CNO's Max Fawcett argues that Carney is effectively calling Smith's bluff — a kind of judo move that avoids direct confrontation and puts the pressure back on her: 'He will, as Smith demanded, create the conditions for a more rapid assessment of infrastructure projects. But it's clear that one of those conditions will be the net-zero targets that Smith and Alberta's oil and gas industry have repeatedly committed themselves to.' Politics is the art of the possible, as they say. And perhaps there's a method behind the oxymorons and doublespeak. But it's hard to shake the sense that we're kidding ourselves and avoiding the basic reckoning. Still muttering about decarbonizing hydrocarbons even as the flames close in.

DND says F-35 review will be completed in the summer
DND says F-35 review will be completed in the summer

Ottawa Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • Ottawa Citizen

DND says F-35 review will be completed in the summer

Article content The Department of National Defence's review of its F-35 purchase will be completed sometime in the summer, but officials won't say exactly when or whether the report will be released to the public. Article content Prime Minister Mark Carney ordered a review of Canada's $19-billion F-35 purchase in mid-March in the wake of threats against Canadian sovereignty by U.S. President Donald Trump. The U.S. has become increasingly hostile to Canada, with the American president continuing with his economic efforts to punish Canada and push for this country to become the 51st state. Article content Article content Article content At this point, Canada has only financially committed to purchasing the first 16 jets from the U.S. government. The entire order was for 88 F-35s, which are manufactured by the American defence giant Lockheed Martin. Article content Department of National Defence spokeswoman Andrée-Anne Poulin stated in an email that the F-35 review is being led by the offices of the assistant deputy minister for review services and the assistant deputy minister for materiel. They are receiving input from other organizations such as the Royal Canadian Air Force. The assistant deputy minister for material and the RCAF played key roles in the original selection of the F-35 for Canada. Article content 'It is anticipated that this review will be finalized in Summer 2025,' the email from Poulin pointed out. Article content DND could not say which month the review would be completed. Article content Asked by the Ottawa Citizen if it would be accurate to state the review would be finished by the end of August, the DND responded that, 'Further information will be provided in due course.' Article content Article content Poulin had previously noted that, 'The review would take into account the work already done to replace Canada's current fighter jet fleet.' Article content Article content Former defence procurement chief Alan Williams and various defence analysts have warned that the F-35 represents a strategic vulnerability for Canada since the U.S. has total control over software upgrades and spare parts on the aircraft. Article content The Ottawa Citizen reported May 5 that the U.S. owns all parts for Canada's F-35s even when they are located at Canadian bases.

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