VANCOUVER – Buildings in Canada are responsible for about 35 per cent of the country’s greenhouse gas emissions, representing the single greatest opportunity to reduce emissions, GLOBE 2008 heard.
Emissions from commercial buildings could be reduced to 1990 levels by 2030, by taking a best-practices approach that uses building materials that are readily available and affordable and have a 10-year payback period or less, said Jonathan Westeinde, chair of the Advisory Group for Green Buildings in North America for the Commission for Environmental Cooperation based in Montreal.
Emissions from residential buildings could be well below 1990 levels within the same time frame,…
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The Current Issue
- Renewable Energy’s Future Remains Bright, Despite Global Economic Downturn
- World-Class Pipeline Industry Threatened by Proposed National Rules on GHG Emissions
- Oilsands Upgrader Approval Ignores Alberta Land-use Framework, Farmers Say
- Syncrude Canada Charged Over Dead Ducks at Oilsands Tailings Pond
- Environmental Law
- Climate Change Industry Must Plan Now For Climate Change Impacts, Water Shortages, Experts Say
- Wastewater Nutrient-Recovery Technology Makes Fertilizer, Boosts Phosphorus Supplies
- People & Companies
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Articles (newest first)
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Category: All Articles (continued)
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Category: Energy (continued)
- Auditor General investigating alleged conflict of interest in energy project
- National energy vision needed, says Energy Council of Canada president
- Coal remains important energy source
- “Customer-centric” power at ENMAX
- Seven-year initiative on public safety and sour gas is completed – or is it?
- Former EUB head touts regional hearings for energy projects
- Oil and gas companies following rules
- Alberta premier, industry reject “time-out” on Eastern Slopes development
- Groundwater needs better protection
- Oilpatch requires more resources, innovation to safeguard water supplies
- Cover Story: Power Plant Developer Offers Landowners Innovative Deal
- Alberta’s privacy commissioner has launched an investigation
- CBM drilling in natural area ignores public interests, conservationists say
- Alberta power grid expansion meeting public resistance; hearing restricted
- Wind forecasting study launched
- Gasification power plant announced
- Cover Story: Non-Partisan Coalition Launches Stewardship Agenda
- Energy Briefs
- One Calgary company withdraws, one firm is still in for CBM exploration in British Columbia’s Bulkley Valley
- New framework to protect Athabasca River from oilsands projects criticized
- Growing oil and gas activity demands regulatory streamlining, policy clarity, CAPP environmental seminar hears
- Sour gas-urban conflict evident as EUB delays sour gas pipeline decision
- Cover Story: Nuclear Power for the Oilsands: Weighing the Costs and Benefits
- Category: Environmental Law
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Category: Energy (continued)
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