Articles
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Oct 9, 2024 |
thehub.ca | Daniel Dufort |Adam Legge
Commentary 9 October 2024 Justin Trudeau and Francois Legault at an announcement that Northvolt Batteries North America will build a new EV battery manufacturing plant near Montreal, Sept. 28, 2023. Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press. The following is the fifth in a series of French-language articles presented in collaboration with the Montreal Economic Institute. The English translation is included below.
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Oct 8, 2024 |
thehub.ca | Adam Legge |Joseph Quesnel
Commentary 8 October 2024 A man makes his way through the cold in the city’s financial district, Toronto, January 28, 2014. Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press. Imagine a world where you fear talking about your aspirations for the future. Imagine a world where, because of that fear, you back away from trying new things, trying to improve your community or your country. The last thing Canada needs is incentive to be less ambitious.
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Mar 13, 2024 |
thehub.ca | Adam Legge
What’s being touted as an emissions cap on the oil and gas sector has significant potential to become a prosperity cap for Canadians and Indigenous communities. When you first hear of a cap on oil and gas emissions, you might think “What’s wrong with a cap on emissions?” Energy is a high-emitting sector that says it is working hard to reduce emissions, so why would this be a problem?
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Jan 15, 2024 |
thehub.ca | Adam Legge
When climate change surfaced on the public agenda during the 1990s, it felt to many that this was a problem that could easily be kicked down the road. Governments of many stripes made plans to address it, but implementation was slow. Today no political party fails to take climate change seriously. While there are strong debates on how to do so, there are no serious debates on whether to do so.
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Oct 23, 2023 |
nationalpost.com | Adam Legge
Skip to ContentAdvertisement 1The draft one-size-fits-all scheme unfairly threatens energy security in some provinces, while barely grazing others • • Article contentAll Canadians are subject to the “fate of geography,” a series of outcomes and realities associated with where exactly one lives in the country. Waterways, mountains, valleys, sunlight, wind and proximity to oceans all factor into that fate.
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