Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Notice

From the Prime Minister's Web Site (http://www.pm.gc.ca/)



Public events for March 14, 2007

March 13, 2007
Ottawa, Ontario

Public events for Prime Minister Stephen Harper for Wednesday, March 14th are:

King City, Ontario

10:00 a.m. – Prime Minister Stephen Harper, along with Minister of the Environment, John Baird, will be given a tour.

Residence of Dr. Henry J.M. Barnett
14865 7th Concession
King City, ON
L7B 1K8

*Photo opportunity only*

Note: Media will be required to park on the street and walk up to the residence.

11:00 a.m. – Prime Minister Stephen Harper will make an announcement. He will be joined by Minister of the Environment, John Baird.

Ballroom B
The Kingsbridge Centre
12750 Jane Street
King City, ON
L7B 1A3

*Open to media*

Note: Media will be required to show proper identification for accreditation.
The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
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Speech

From the Prime Minister's Web Site (http://www.pm.gc.ca/)



PRIME MINISTER ANNOUNCES CANADA ECOTRUST FUNDING FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA

March 13, 2007


Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.

Thank you John, for that generous introduction, and thank you to Premier Campbell and Ministers, federal and provincial, for joining us for today's important announcement.

It's great to be back in British Columbia, not least because it gives me a taste of what spring will be like when it arrives in Ottawa … in another couple of months.

This is our latest stop on a national tour that Ministers Baird and Lunn and I have undertaken in support of our government's new Canada ecoTrust for Clean Air and Climate Change.

These trusts are designed to help all the provinces and territories finance projects that will advance the development of clean energy and directly reduce air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.

At every stop on the tour, we have enjoyed tremendous cooperation with our provincial partners.

The relationship of openness between Ottawa and the provinces that we promised in the last election is being demonstrated once again by that excellent collaboration on climate change and clean air.

We all agree that achieving the right balance between environmental protection and a healthy economy is the fundamental public policy challenge of our time.

All Canadians are concerned about the environment.

For far too long there's been too much talk.

Too much posturing and empty rhetoric.

We are replacing that with practical action.

In Quebec, ecoTrust Canada will help support various initiatives by the Government of Quebec to reduce greenhouse gas missions by some 14 million tonnes by 2012.

In Ontario, the Trust Fund will help the province phase out its dirty coal-fired electrical plants and import clean hydro power from Manitoba.

Last week in Alberta, we announced that it will help fund the development of carbon capture and storage, an exciting new technology that takes CO2 out of the air and buries it deep underground.

Today, I am very pleased to announce that the Government of British Columbia will dedicate its share of the Trust Fund to environmental initiatives that will make real, measurable contributions to reducing air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.

These include:

  • getting clean electricity to remote rural areas now fuelled by dirty diesel, including electrification of Highway 37;

  • support for new geothermal and bio-energy projects, including the capture of biogas from landfill sites;

  • extracting energy from sawmill scrap and wood infested with pine beetles.

    A fourth initiative is what brings us to this impressive National Research Council facility today.

    Here at the NRC's Institute for Fuel Cell Innovation, federal government scientists are working closely with the province and industry partners on what could be the dominant energy form of the future.

    Hydrogen fuel cells have the potential to produce energy much more efficiently than the conventional internal combustion engine.

    They run almost silently.

    Best of all, their only by-product is water vapour.

    The technology has already moved beyond the prototype stage.

    Large fuel cells are powering entire buildings.

    Small ones are energizing electronic gadgets.

    Over the past decade, engineers based right here in Vancouver have made important contributions to the development of increasingly efficient and economically viable hydrogen fuel cells.

    One of their dreams is of the day when we can wean our automobiles off gasoline.

    But they've got a chicken-and-egg problem:

    No automaker wants to build hydrogen-fuelled cars until there's a network of fuelling stations, and no fuel maker wants to build stations until there are cars that need them.

    That's where we come in.

    Today's Trust Fund announcement builds on our existing commitment to assist BC in the development of the "hydrogen highway" from Vancouver to Whistler in time for the 2010 winter Olympics.

    This initiative will showcase the technology for the world.

    And for the visionaries here at IFCI, it will be just the first stage of the world's first international hydrogen highway, stretching all the way from BC to California.

    Obviously, this is a long-term project: the global hydrocarbon economy will not be transformed overnight.

    But the Stone Age did not end because the world ran out of stones, and the oil age will end long before the world runs out of oil.

    Someday, historians may look back and conclude that it all started right here in British Columbia.

    And on behalf of Canada's New Government, we are honoured, Premier, to play a part in it.

    Thank you.

    The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
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  • Speech

    From the Prime Minister's Web Site (http://www.pm.gc.ca/)



    PRIME MINISTER ANNOUNCES $1 BILLION FOR CANADIAN FARMERS

    March 9, 2007
    Saskatoon, Saskatchewan

    Good morning.

    Thank you Chuck for that kind introduction, and thank you ladies and gentlemen for coming out today.

    Before I begin, I'd also like to express my gratitude to Don and Diane Côté and their family for hosting us here at their beautiful farm. Thank you for your western hospitality, Don and Diane.

    Friends, it's a great pleasure to be back among the stewards of the prairies, the farmers who till the soil, raise the livestock, and grow the good food we give thanks for at our tables.

    In every region of our great country – the Maritimes, Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia, and right here on the prairies – Canadian farmers are producing the food that keeps Canada growing.

    But as you well know, farming is more than just food production.

    It's a way of life – one rooted in a commitment to the land, to family, and to community.

    The farmer's work ethic is second to none.

    You know about long hours and strenuous labour.

    You know about managing costs and risks.

    And you know what it's like to win against tough competition.

    It's common knowledge that it takes a sharp business mind and an entrepreneurial spirit to be a successful farmer.

    These are necessities of farming life – as much as irrigation, good soil, the right amount of sun – and a patient banker.

    More than anything else, though, farming takes commitment.

    There's no get-rich-quick formula; you're in it for the long haul.

    And friends, Canada's New Government knows about commitment.

    In our first Speech from the Throne, we recognized the unique challenges faced by those who make their living off the land.

    And we made a commitment, that we would take action to help farmers secure a prosperous future for Canadian agriculture, after years of neglect.

    We said we would respond to short-term needs, by creating separate and more effective farm income stabilization and disaster relief programs.

    And that we would work with producers and other partners to achieve long-term competitiveness and sustainability.

    The reason we made these commitments is simple: Canadian farmers deserve an ally in Ottawa.

    And that's what they have in Canada's New Government.

    Since taking office, we have:

    • provided emergency payments to the grain and oilseed producers who needed it in time for last spring's planting;

    • introduced a major new disaster relief framework;

    • shielded Canadian producers against imports of milk protein concentrates;

    • committed a billion and a half dollars in new spending for agriculture in the 2006 budget; and

    • started the process of reforming and replacing the Canadian Agricultural Income Stabilization Program.

    These are all important steps in the right direction, but our government recognizes that more needs to be done,

    Especially about rising costs of production.

    During the past 15 years prices for key farm inputs, including machinery, fuel, labour, pesticides and fertilizers, have dramatically outpaced increases in farm income.

    Input prices have risen over three times higher than product prices.

    This imbalance has caused hardship for farmers across the country.

    And that's what brings me here today.

    I'm pleased to announce today that our government is committing $1 billion to help farmers cope with soaring costs of production.

    This initiative represents another major step toward fulfilling the promise we made to replace CAIS with support that is more predictable, bankable and responsive to the cost-price squeeze.

    We are already working with the provinces on enhancements to production insurance, improvements to the margin-based program, and a new disaster relief framework.

    But the centrepiece of today's announcement is an important step in the evolution of income stabilization modeled on conventional bank savings accounts.

    Three-fifths of the new funding will be used to kick-start this program.

    And to respond to the pressures that farmers are facing now, the remainder will be paid directly to eligible producers to provide immediate relief from rising production costs.

    On top of these measures, we are committing to an annual cost of production benefit, to be paid out in every year of the next five when there is a net increase in production costs.

    Our government is hopeful that the provinces will join us in the cost-sharing approach that lies at the heart of the new farm savings program.

    And we'll be looking to work with the provinces quickly so producers will be able to benefit as soon as possible.

    All these new benefits are contingent on passage of budget 2007. It will be tabled 10 days from now, and it must be passed by the end of the month.

    But in order for that to happen, our minority government is going to need opposition support.

    I urge the opposition parties, therefore, to think of our farmers when determining how to vote on the budget.

    These hardworking Canadian men and women grow the food that keeps our great country strong, healthy, independent and free,

    They deserve nothing less than our full support.

    Thank you.

    The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
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    News Release

    From the Prime Minister's Web Site (http://www.pm.gc.ca/)



    PRIME MINISTER HARPER ANNOUNCES ECOTRUST FUNDING FOR B.C.

    B.C. INVESTMENT TO DELIVER REAL RESULTS FOR CANADIANS
    March 13, 2007
    Vancouver, British Columbia

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper, joined by British Columbia Premier Gordon Campbell, today announced that Canada's New Government intends to provide British Columbia with $199.3 million, as part of a new Canada ecoTrust to support provincial projects that will result in real reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and air pollutants.

    "Canada's New Government is investing to protect Canadians from the consequences of climate change, air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions," said the Prime Minister. "Today's announcement recognizes British Columbia's ambitious plans in this area, and provides support for measurable progress that benefits all Canadians."

    "British Columbians have told us it is time to address the very real issue of climate change, and British Columbia has developed targets and a strategy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions," said Premier Campbell. "We welcome the federal government's commitment to work with us on this initiative."

    British Columbia's funding under the Canada ecoTrust is intended to support projects consistent with British Columbia's plan to reduce carbon and greenhouse gas emissions by 33 per cent from current levels by 2020, roughly 23 million tonnes of carbon dioxide or equivalent below current levels. The government of British Columbia has indicated that it will use the Canada ecoTrust funding to move forward on several provincial projects, which may include:

  • Extracting energy from sawmill scrap and wood infested with pine beetles;
  • Providing clean electricity to remote rural areas now fuelled by dirty diesel, such as electrification of Highway 37;
  • Support for the development of a "hydrogen highway" a network of hydrogen fuelling stations for fuel celled buses and vehicles; and
  • Support for new geothermal and bio-energy projects, including the capture of bio-gas from landfill sites.

    The Canada ecoTrust for Clean Air and Climate Change will be designed to allow each province and territory to develop technology, energy efficiency, and other projects that will provide real results. The Government of Canada will work with all provinces and territories to fully develop this new, national fund.

    Canada's New Government is already taking concrete action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution by committing to implement aggressive regulations to reduce emissions in all sectors and bring in new initiatives in the energy and transportation sectors. The provincial initiatives supported by the Canada ecoTrust will complement those efforts.

    This Canada ecoTrust will be established using part of the anticipated 2006-07 budgetary surplus. The resources for the Canada ecoTrust initiative will consist of $1.5 billion of new funding on a national basis. This funding will be contained in the upcoming federal budget and is a part of the actions to be taken on the fiscal imbalance. This new funding will be available as soon as Parliament approves that budget.

    The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
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