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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- Renewable Energy’s Future Remains Bright, Despite Global Economic Downturn
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Articles (newest first)
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Category: All Articles (continued)
- Category: Green Business (continued)
- Category: Land Use
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Category: Opinion
- Boosting Nuclear Power Key to Reducing Emissions, Fighting Climate Change
- Alberta Has Better Options Than Nuclear for Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions
- Reject cap-and-trade system: expert
- Carbon Capture & Storage Partnership crucial to advance CCS
- Fossil fuel use, preventing climate change are both possible, forum hears
- Alberta can lead the way with carbon capture and storage technology
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Category: Opinion & Analysis
- Supreme Court to Decide On Citizens’ Legal Remedies Against Corporate Pollution
- “Best Practices” Approach To Regulate Energy Development Is Flawed, Outmoded
- Cover Story - Alberta’s New Utilities Act Is Ripe for Court Challenge
- Public inquiry needed into Alberta’s planned electric system expansion
- Alaska Highway Gas Project Anticipates New Incentives, Mackenzie Project Also Likely To Need Fiscal ‘Sweetener’
- Norway’s state-owned energy sector touted as good model
- NAFTA seen as obstacle to Canada’s energy self-sufficiency
- Parkland Institute Conference: Expert calls for new ways of managing global energy production and consumption
- Category: Special Report
- Category: Technology
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