Canada’s Climate Wake up Call

Silhouettes of oil pumps against a sunset backdrop featuring the Canadian flag.

From Science Matters

By Ron Clutz

A graphic featuring a white oil pump jack inside a red maple leaf silhouette, symbolizing the Canadian oil industry.

Vijay Jayaraj writes at American Thinker Canada wakes up to climate reality Excerpts in italics with my bolds

Canadian fearmongering about a “climate emergency” served
only to empower a bureaucratic class intent on
controlling consumption and taxing lifestyles. 

A recent memorandum of understanding between Canadian prime minister Mark Carney and Alberta premier Danielle Smith represents the inevitable reassertion of economic necessity over the fantasy of “decarbonization” that has gripped Ottawa for the past decade.

Allowing for the construction of a pipeline to transport Albertan oil to a Pacific export terminal, the agreement prompted the resignation of one liberal member of parliament and celebration from the province’s leader. “This is a great day for Alberta,” declared Smith.

Alberta is a major vessel in Canada’s economic bloodstream. The province’s energy sector generates $88 billion in annual gross domestic product (GDP), which is 25% of the Alberta’s total economic outputThis revenue flows east to the national capital to fund federal transfers that support public finances of other provinces, some of which oppose the oil production that provides them cash.

Map of Canada showing estimated percentage of population affected by climate change as of 2015, with a color gradient from dark blue to yellow indicating varying levels of impact.
Global Warming survey of Canadians, twisted and ignored by Trudeau Liberals.

Atlantic Canada, parts of Quebec, and even Ontario benefit from royalties and tax revenues generated by hydrocarbons extracted thousands of miles away. So-called moral objections to oil sands development are often voiced by inhabitants of Halifax or Montreal but rarely heard is a willingness to forgo the western revenue that keeps hospitals open and public payrolls funded.

So, it was financial reality that drove Carney to upend expectations established by countless government documents, climate pledges, and regulatory frameworks the previous government put in place to “save the planet” by discouraging the use of fossil fuels. 

A political cartoon illustrating a tornado labeled 'Federal Carbon Taxes and Fuel Regulations' approaching a house and a barn, representing Alberta.

Canada’s climate industrial complex had predicted that pipelines would become stranded assets and that Alberta would fade into irrelevance as net zero became federal policy. However, the deal signed by Carney moves in the opposite direction, making provisions for new infrastructure and signaling that even Canada’s most climate-obsessed federal leadership cannot govern without fossil fuels.

A political cartoon depicting four people from Saudi Arabia, the U.S., Russia, and Canada, each wearing oversized chimney-like hats labeled with their respective countries, highlighting the theme of emission caps.

In technical terms, the federal cap on oil and gas emissions has been suspended. The Clean Electricity Regulation — a proposed constraint on Alberta’s ability to generate affordable power — has been loosened. Timelines for reducing methane emissions have been extended beyond 2030. Yes, there are caveats that appear to impose a soft form of anti-carbon sentiment, but the overall picture has changed. 

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), a publicly funded institution, has consistently parroted environmental advocates who treat fossil fuels as abominations rather than economic necessities. This messaging has convinced many Canadians that their government is committing a terrible sin by producing energy the world demands. Lost on them is the fact that Canadian oil and natural gas are produced under far more stringent standards than exist in the Middle East, Russia, or other regions.

Scatter plot showing the relationship between electricity consumption per capita (kWh) and GDP per capita (current US$). The plot highlights a trend indicating that there are no low energy, rich countries, with a note in red stating 'There are no low energy, rich countries'.

Energy abundance underpins prosperity. Nations that constrain their energy supply impoverish themselves. Nations that produce reliable, affordable energy benefit their populations and the broader world. Canada should produce the energy for itself and export the surplus to global markets.

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Beyond energy economics, there is another dimension to Canada’s economic future that the legacy climate orthodoxy dismisses: agricultureCanada’s warming climate has extended growing seasons across the prairies and opened new agricultural possibilities. 

Bar chart illustrating Canadian all wheat production in thousands of metric tons from 2001 to 2023, showing yearly fluctuations and projections.

According to official data, “total wheat production rose 11.2% year over year to a record 40 million (metric tons) in 2025, surpassing the previous record set in 2013.” Canola production rose 13%, surpassing a record set in 2017. Barley and oat production rose 19% and 17%, respectively.

In all, the output for all principal field crops increased by 4% year-over-year. For the next crop year (2025-2026), total production is projected to reach near record levels, up 3% year-over-year and 8% above the previous five-year average.

Graph depicting global crop yields from 1961 to 2023, showing trends for various crops like bananas, potatoes, cassava, and maize.

Historical analysis demonstrates that climate conditions across Canadian agricultural regions have shifted toward longer growing seasons, with more frost-free days and expanded viable crop zones.

Critics will claim that allowing a new pipeline is a betrayal of future generations. But what truly endangers posterity? A fraction of a degree of warming that extends growing seasons? Or a future of energy scarcity, deindustrialization, and economic stagnation?

A cartoon depicting a large machine labeled 'JUST TRANSITION' with workers in hard hats approaching it, while another character at a counter asks if they would like fries with their order, referencing a Walmart-like setting.

Fearmongering about a “climate emergency” served only to empower a bureaucratic class intent on controlling consumption and taxing lifestyles. It did nothing to change atmospheric physics or the needs of people who rely on affordable energy to survive.

Billboard message promoting the idea that there is no climate crisis, featuring a person sleeping peacefully. Includes text directing viewers to CO2coalition.org.


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