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Alberta budget weakens environmental, climate monitoring: Opposition

Last Updated Oct 28, 2019 at 4:16 pm MDT

A flare stack lights the sky along refinery row in Edmonton Alta, on Friday December 28, 2018. Alberta's new budget cuts funds for environmental monitoring and managing greenhouse gas emissions. Critics say the moves will weaken the province's ability to track pollution and reduce its contribution to climate change. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

EDMONTON — The Alberta budget tabled last week cuts funds for environmental monitoring and for managing greenhouse gas emissions.

Critics say that will weaken the province’s ability to track pollution and reduce its contribution to climate change.

The budget says the science and monitoring office, established by the Progressive Conservatives to study industrial impacts on the environment, is to have its budget cut by almost five per cent.

The emissions management office is to take a 20 per cent cut by 2023.

That office tracks greenhouse gas emissions and runs programs encouraging industry to reduce them.

The province has not provided a response.

Earlier this month, the United Conservative government told Environment Department employees that it was ending stand-alone offices for climate change and environmental monitoring.

Opposition members of the legislatures warned at the time that the moves were a prelude to funding cuts.

New Democrat environment critic Marlin Schmidt says the budget hands more control of environmental monitoring to industry.

Keyano College addressed the 2019 Alberta Budget cuts to advanced education.

This report made with excerpts from The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 28, 2019.