Our Climate Solution Stories

People across the country are leading the shift away from fossil fuels.

Read their stories, share yours, then join us in demanding bold federal investments to make sure everyone can benefit from climate action.

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Renewable energy saved this community from black outs

“The small City of Summerside, PEI owns its own electrical utility and has one of the greenest grids in North America, with most of our energy coming from municipally-owned solar and wind farms. 

This is a huge point of community pride, and it also lets our municipal government turn those profits into community resources like wellness and recreation facilities. 

Having a municipally-owned utility also makes us so much more resilient to climate impacts. We’re a low-lying Island and we see the impacts of climate change more and more on the Island every year. In 2022, Hurricane Fiona devastated Atlantic Canada and left so much damaged infrastructure in its wake. During hurricane Fiona, 95 per cent of the province lost power.

Because Summerside Electric is a public good and has such a strong incentive to continually be making upgrades to our infrastructure, Summerside fared way better than most of the Island during Fiona. Some parts of PEI took upwards of three weeks to restore power, including both rural and urban areas. Most of Summerside had their power back within two to three days.”

-Jill, Summerside, PEI

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Heat pumps powered by wind and solar going strong at -20°C

“A decade ago we built a 2,000 sq ft double wall home with R60 ceiling, R60 walls and R24 under the concrete slab.

Double wall allowed the home to be very airtight. We put large double glaze windows on the passive solar south and west sides and triple glaze on north and east. We heat with heat pumps (mainly with one) and an airtight wood stove as back up in case of power failure.

We have an air source heat pump hot water heater. All our home energy comes from electricity. Even at -20°c it all works and having a municipal utility with a solar garden and wind mills makes up for the Nova Scotia Power poor performance in getting off fossil fuels and also means fewer and shorter power failures. It also means we have a say in where our energy comes from – energy democracy rather than profit driven energy.”

-Anonymous, Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia

 

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We can’t afford for widespread car ownership to be our future — and it doesn’t have to be

I recently joined the board of the local car-share cooperative Modo which has over 1,000 vehicles and serves 30,000 members across the province. Our goal is to displace private car ownership with a fleet of shared vehicles. We have pre-installed car seats in many vehicles, which as a parent I really appreciate. We also have a range of vehicles to meet different needs including moving vans.  

Modo has plans to fully electrify its fleet — although additional government rebates and better charging infrastructure would definitely help us do that faster.

We know with more political will we can have more walkable communities, better transit and more co-operatives like Modo that replace car ownership with better alternatives, plus our communities can benefit from less congested roads and cleaner air.”

-Atiya, Vancouver, BC

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Individuals can only do so much; we need to work together.

I am very tired of delays, ignorance and greed. Individuals can only do so much; we need to work together.

I live in a natural, sustainable home that is 75% passive and active solar heated, grid tied and PV-ready, designed to be grid-tied with battery backup, supporting the grid. It is also highly fire resilient, located on a brownfield site and clear of floodplain.

I grow much of my own food and live in a farming and ranching community. I have worked as an energy advisor and renewable energy installer, designed and built my own deep green home. I have been an active environmentalist and cyclist for over 40 years. Let’s get on with all the many completely viable solutions that we have available to us. My home and I have also weathered wildfires of 2017 and 2021.”

 

-Wendy McLean, Savona, BC

 

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Heat pump slashes gas bill to less than $20 / month

“I am 78 years old, a former Canadian and Environmental Studies educator and an organic/regenerative farmer. I purchased a new home in 2022 and arranged to have an air to air cold climate heat pump installed.

Since the summer of 2022, my gas bill is less than $20 monthly. In addition, I have assembled and planted six 6’x3’x2’ raised garden beds . Since the summer of 2023, using organic and regenerative practices, I have grown and shared a diversity of vegetables and herbs. I am both sharing with and teaching my neighbours, restoring gardens at a community garden and leading a regenerative charity garden project which provides produce to our local food bank and two small restaurants. I preserve much of the produce that I grow and I share that knowledge with others.”

– Bob Garthson, Cobourg, Ontario


Workers cooperative builds energy efficient homes

“In 2012 we formed a workers cooperative to build high performance energy efficient buildings. In 2022 we installed a heat pump to replace our wood burning furnace. In 2023 we purchased an electric vehicle to replace our internal combustion engine vehicle.”

-Rick Proven, Erickson, Manitoba

 


We’ve seen huge annual savings on our energy bills

“Our family installed solar panels on our home and garage several years ago. Even north of 60, where we only have enough sunlight for half the year, we’ve seen huge annual savings on our energy bills. It feels amazing to use the sun to charge our electric vehicle all summer long.

We recently installed a heat pump which has been great not only for heating our home in the winter, but we also hope it helps keep our home cool and smoke free in the hotter, drier summers.”

– Meghan Marjanovic, Whitehorse, Yukon

 


We’ve seen huge annual savings on our energy bills

“Our family installed solar panels on our home and garage several years ago. Even north of 60, where we only have enough sunlight for half the year, we’ve seen huge annual savings on our energy bills. It feels amazing to use the sun to charge our electric vehicle all summer long.

We recently installed a heat pump which has been great not only for heating our home in the winter, but we also hope it helps keep our home cool and smoke free in the hotter, drier summers.”

– Meghan Marjanovic, Whitehorse, Yukon

 


Microgeneration makes so much sense

“We are taking advantage of the federal rebates on home retrofitting to put triple-glazed windows, plus 50 insulation and solar panels on our son’s house. We already have solar panels, triple-glazed windows and are going to do a heat pump next. We’d like to see solar on every third roof in the country…microgeneration makes so much sense and transitioning off fossil gas, coal and oil is a necessity.”

-Mary I. Nokleby, Calgary, Alberta


More stories to come…

Sign the petition

Show the Feds what's possible.

We shouldn't be struggling to pay our bills while facing worsening climate impacts year after year.

Let's Show the Feds that with courage and leadership they can make it easier for people and communities everywhere to thrive while tackling multiple overlapping emergencies.

Dear PM Trudeau, Cabinet Ministers, and federal party leaders, take action now for a better, more affordable future: 

We call on you to act urgently in response to the overlapping crises that people across Canada are currently facing. 

We shouldn't be struggling to pay our bills while facing worsening climate impacts year after year. It's time for you to take decisive action to make it easier for people and communities everywhere to thrive. 

Fossil fuel dependence is making life more expensive for everyday people while helping billionaires profit off fuelling climate chaos. The good news is that as everything else gets more expensive, renewable energy is cheaper than ever -- in fact, it's the cheapest source of electricity that has ever existed. We need action now to ensure affordable energy, breathable air, and a liveable climate. 

It's time to prioritize a transition that tackles the climate crisis while supporting our communities. 

We call on you to deliver the following critical pieces of legislative action: 

1. Affordable, reliable, renewable energy infrastructure

  • A legislated roadmap to achieve 100% affordable, reliable, renewable power for all by 2035 by strengthening clean energy regulations.
  • Binding emissions reduction targets, an ambitious emissions cap, and a robust plan to rapidly transition us off fossil fuels that are poisoning our planet and our health.
  • Federal funding for large-scale publicly-owned renewable and community-led energy projects, grid efficiency upgrades, and energy storage.
  • Maximum resourcing and direct support for Indigenous-owned and Indigenous-led renewable energy projects. 
  • Indigenous leadership in utilities regulation, infrastructure ownership, partnerships, and policy development processes around energy and electricity.
  • All developments to move forward in partnership and with the full consent of Indigenous communities that directly benefit from new projects on their territories. 

2. Affordable, safe, green housing 

  • Mass government investment in zero-carbon, safe public housing that prioritizes access for low-income and unhoused communities. 
  • A universal heat pump program accompanied by needs-based support for retrofits, and rental protections that ensure no tenants are displaced. 
  • Federal regulations to ensure all new builds are energy efficient, fully electric with no gas connections, and equipped with heat pumps.
  • Dedicated support and funding for Indigenous communities to build zero-carbon homes along with electricity infrastructure, as part of a broader effort to increase housing stock.
  • Funding to municipalities and provinces who transition to all zero-carbon buildings ahead of federal timelines.

3. Accessible, reliable, electrified transit infrastructure 

  • A national public transit strategy and a permanent federal funding mechanism to enable long term transit expansion that meets the needs of diverse communities and geographies, including high-speed, electric public rail to connect population centres and electrified public bus fleets to serve rural and remote communities.
  • Resources for communities to kickstart locally relevant shared mobility and active transportation initiatives and implement infrastructure updates to promote zero carbon transportation.
  • Ensure all development moves forward in partnership with and with the full consent of Indigenous communities that directly benefit from new projects on their territories.

4. Good, unionized green jobs 

  • Mass investment in public programs that employ people doing the essential work of retrofitting our homes, operating rapid transit, restoring natural ecosystems, building a 100% renewable powered grid, and other critical work. 
  • A Youth Climate Corps that provides training and living wages to young people doing important climate action work in their communities.
  • Resources for public post-secondary institutions to run training programs for a diverse range of jobs in the green economy, including retraining existing workers.
  • Direct support for skill-building and education programs for Indigenous learners and students, including on-reserve programs developed by Indigenous communities to build their own project development capacity.

5. Immediate relief and direct support for climate impacted communities

  • Immediate and direct federal support for people directly affected by climate-driven flooding, wildfires, extreme heat, and other disasters. 
  • A commitment to fulfill our international responsibility by paying our fair share to limit emissions abroad, contributing generously to the global Loss and Damage Fund, and granting full status to refugees and migrants displaced by climate change. 
  • Investment in Indigenous-led climate resilience initiatives rooted in Traditional Ecological Knowledge.

The mass government investments we are demanding represent approximately 2% of GDP, for an average of $57 billion in public spending annually over five years. In their “Spend What it Takes” report, Climate Action Network Canada (CAN-Rac) and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) have outlined out how Canada can afford this plan. Read it here.

Dear PM Trudeau, Cabinet Ministers, and federal party leaders, take action now for a better, more affordable future: 

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