The 2000 Budget: Environmental Technologies and Sustainable
Practices
February 28, 2000
For Canadians, protecting the environment is not an option - it is something
we must do.
For Canada to be the place to be in the 21st century our lakes and air must
be clean, our green spaces and diverse habitat and species must be protected and
we must deal with climate change.
Meeting these challenges also provides a great opportunity to integrate
environmental and economic policy through the development of new technologies
and sustainable practices.
Budget 2000 proposes to invest $700 million to meet these essential
objectives, including:
- $210 million over three years in new funding for "green" energy
development and the Climate Change Action Fund;
- $100 million for a new Sustainable Development Technology Fund - which
will help companies develop new environmental technologies and bring them to
market;
- $100 million for a new Green Municipal Investment Fund - a revolving fund,
leveraging private sector investment, in such areas as waste management and
water conservation at the municipal level;
- $90 million over three years for our National Strategy on Species At Risk;
- $60 million for a new Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric
Sciences - a network of institutes that will link researchers from across
the country to further our understanding, for instance, of the impact of
climate change and air pollution on human health;
- $25 million for a new Green Municipal Enabling Fund to help communities
assess where their environmental needs are greatest;
- $22 million over three years to improve the federal government's capacity
to enforce pollution control standards;
- $9 million over three years so that the National Roundtable on the
Environment and the Economy and Environment Canada, working with Statistics
Canada, can develop a set of indicators to measure environmental performance
in conjunction with economic performance; and,
- $8 million annually for the expansion of the Great Lakes Action Plan.
Our government will also change its procurement policy to move, as much as
possible, to more environmentally-friendly energy - stimulating market demand
for green power.
And we will reduce the capital gains tax on donations of Ecologically
Sensitive Lands.
The 2000 Budget
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