Question Period Note: Climate Change/Greenhouse Gas Mitigation in Northern and Indigenous Communities

About

Reference number:
NA-2019-20017
Date received:
Dec 13, 2019
Organization:
Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada
Name of Minister:
Vandal, Dan (Hon.)
Title of Minister:
Minister of Northern Affairs

Suggested Response:

We are committed to taking leadership on issues of importance to the North, including climate change, through the Artic and Northern Policy Framework.

The Pan Canadian Framework on Climate Change established the Northern REACHE program, which supports northern and Indigenous communities to develop renewable energy and energy efficiency projects and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Our government is committed to ensuring that northern and Indigenous communities have access to clean and reliable sources of energy that will reduce reliance on diesel across the North.

Background:

Opportunities and constraints for renewable energy development
Besides the high risks and costs associated with supplying fuel to these communities, burning diesel fuel presents a number of environmental, social and economic challenges, including, but not limited to, emissions of greenhouse gases, possibilities of fuel leaks and spills from storage facilities, and energy security issues (i.e., reliance on uncertain availability of seasonal roads, barges, etc). These challenges drive the need for programming targeted at reducing energy consumption and developing clean energy projects within these communities.

Deployment, demonstration, and integration of energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies present opportunities to improve the energy mix in remote communities. Energy efficiency and conservation measures reduce overall energy demand and can provide significant savings to communities ahead of adding new generation capacity. While renewable energy sources, some of which are intermittent, cannot completely replace diesel consumption, they can displace it in part to reduce the negative impacts of diesel generation while also creating opportunities for local skills development, job creation, and economic development.

Federal coordination to reduce diesel reliance in northern and remote communities
CIRNA's REACHE program provides funding for planning and construction of renewable energy and energy efficiency projects, and related capacity building and planning in the Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Nunavik, and Nunatsiavut. The objective of program is to reduce diesel fuel use for electricity and heating and to build capacity within northern communities, governments, and organizations to support development and long-term operation and maintenance of clean energy projects.

CIRNA also works in close collaboration with federal partners to ensure coordination of other investments that aim to support energy security and reduce reliance on diesel in the North, such as:

Infrastructure Canada: $400 million over 10 years in an Arctic Energy Fund to support energy security in communities in the North, including Indigenous communities, by investing in upgrades to existing fossil fuel-based energy systems, as well as supplementing or replacing these systems with renewable energy options-improving energy reliability and efficiency as well as reducing pollution. Funding will be delivered through integrated bilateral agreements with territorial governments. This Fund will be distributed among the three territories-$175 million each to the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, with $50 million allocated to Yukon.

Natural Resources Canada: $220 million over 6 years to reduce the reliance of rural and remote communities on diesel fuel, and support the use of more sustainable, renewable power solutions.

Additional Information:

None