OUR GREAT MINDS

    by Tina Olivero

    CANADA’S ECONOMIC RECOVERY: Cleaner, Innovative & Diverse

    As the conversation in Canada shifts from immediate relief to economic recovery, new questions will arise: what does recovery look like, and how do we design stimulus that delivers secure jobs in a cleaner, innovative and diverse economy?

    Done right, the federal government’s stimulus and recovery efforts can create jobs, spur cleantech innovation, encourage economic diversification, cut both carbon pollution and illness-causing air pollution, and ultimately make Canada a more resilient country.

    On Friday, April 3, industry and non-profit leaders representing Canada’s clean energy sector—including renewable power, energy efficiency, cleantech, advanced biofuels and electric transportation—submitted an open letter to Prime Minister Trudeau on the need for clean-energy-focused stimulus in order to build a better, more resilient economy.

    You can read the letter here. It emphasizes three overarching recommendations:

    1. To signal climate policy continuity and enhancement.
    2. To invest in sufficient, sustained and sustainable stimulus.
    3. And to move quickly to support clean energy solutions, Canadian cleantech innovation and businesses by expanding existing initiatives and programs.

    In particular, the letter says, “investment in economic diversification must place special attention on the regions that need it most and that have seen record layoffs.”

    The clean energy sector employs 298,000 Canadians in a wide range of jobs: insulating homes, developing clean technologies, manufacturing electric vehicles, building and maintaining wind, solar and hydro projects, producing renewable fuels—these are just a few examples. Independent modelling has found that, by 2030, Canada’s clean energy sector will employ 559,400 Canadians, thanks in part to climate policies and programs spurring a clean energy growth rate four times the Canadian average.

    The energy transition is also enhancing competitiveness and creating new opportunities in other sectors of the economy. These include jobs in low-carbon concrete, steel and aluminum, sustainably produced mass timber, and mining the metals and minerals used in many clean technologies.

    In short, a clean recovery creates winners across the country and across the economy. Organizations that support the letter are listed below. Read the letter here.

    See contact information below for media interview requests.

    SIGNATORIES

    Merran Smith, Executive Director, Clean Energy Canada, Simon Fraser University

    Anne-Raphaëlle Audouin, President & CEO, WaterPower Canada

    Robert Hornung, President, Canadian Wind Energy Association

    Wesley Johnston, President and CEO, Canadian Solar Industries Association 

    Daniel Breton, President and CEO, Electric Mobility Canada

    Corey Diamond, Executive Director, Efficiency Canada

    Ian Thomson, President, Advanced Biofuels Canada

    Julia Langer, CEO, The Atmospheric Fund

    Jacob Malthouse, Canada Cleantech Alliance

    Jeanette Jackson, CEO, Foresight Cleantech Accelerator

    Denis Leclerc, President and CEO, Écotech Québec

    Maike Althaus, Executive Director, Ontario Clean Technology Industry Association

    Tina Olivero

    30 years ago, Tina Olivero looked into the future and saw an opportunity to make a difference for her province and people. That difference came in the form of the oil and gas sector. Six years before there was even a drop of oil brought to the shores of Newfoundland, she founded The Oil and Gas Magazine (THE OGM) from a back room in her home on Signal Hill Road, in St. John’s, Newfoundland. A single mother, no financing, no previous journalism or oil and gas experience, she forged ahead, with a creative vision and one heck of a heaping dose of sheer determination. With her pioneering spirit, Ms. Olivero developed a magazine that would educate, inspire, motivate and entertain oil and gas readers around the world — She prides herself in marketing and promoting our province and resources in unprecedented ways. The OGM is a magazine that focuses on our projects, our people, our opportunities and ultimately becomes the bridge to new energy outcomes and a sustainable new energy world. Now diversifying into the communications realms, a natural progression from the Magazine, The OGM now offers an entirely new division - Oil & Gas Media. Today, The Oil and Gas Magazine is a global phenomenon that operates not only in Newfoundland, but also in Calgary and is read by oil and gas enthusiasts in Norway, Aberdeen, across the US and as far reaching as Abu Dhabi, in the Middle East. Believing that Energy is everyone’s business, Ms. Olivero has combined energy + culture to embrace the worlds commitment to a balance of work and home life as well as fostering a foundation for health and well being. In this era of growth and development business and lifestyle are an eloquent mix, there is no beginning or end. Partnering with over 90 oil and gas exhibitions and conferences around the world, Ms. Olivero's role as a Global Visionary is to embrace communication in a way that fosters oil and gas business and industry growth in new and creative ways.

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      OGM - Our Great Minds