Sean Speer: Mark Carney owes voters a clear answer on his plans for Canada’s oil and gas sector (The Hub)
Mark Carney launched his political career just over three months ago with some counterintuitive policy promises. Notwithstanding his strong environmental track record, he committed to repealing the Trudeau government’s unpopular consumer carbon tax, streamlining the permitting process for major resource projects, and building new energy infrastructure, including more pipelines. These surprising announcements were crucial to distinguishing Carney from his predecessor and establishing his bona fides as a political moderate.
Yet as the election has gone, he’s reverted to his past self. His promise to deregulate the regulatory and permitting processes has been replaced by a defence of the Trudeau government’s Bill C-69, which has not only been ruled unconstitutional in part, but is also widely seen as a major impediment to resource development. He’s committed to preserving the highly costly emission caps on the oil and gas sector. And he’s even been deliberately obscure about whether he supports new pipeline projects at all. In Quebec over the weekend, for instance, he drew on Mackenzie King’s famous doublespeak about conscription when he said: “Not necessarily pipelines, but maybe pipelines, we’ll see” ...
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