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Calgary Climate Strategy [24] Edmonton: Climate Resilient Edmonton [25] Saskatoon: Saskatoon Climate Action Plan [26] Regina: Renewable Regina [27] Halifax: HalifACT [28] Saint John: Municipal Energy Efficiency Program [29] Fredericton: Climate Change Adaptation Plan [30] Charlottetown: Charlottetown Climate Action Plan [31] Mississauga ...
By 2018, 73% of the city's residents were concerned about climate change. In the same year the city hosted the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC): Cities and Climate Change Science Conference. [40] Edmonton has been working on the energy efficiency plan for both civilian and business people.
Edmonton City Hall is the home of the municipal government for Edmonton. ... Environment and Climate Change Canada (sun, UV 1981–2010) ... Ontario, and renamed the ...
In August 2007, the Ontario government released Go Green: Ontario's Action Plan on Climate Change. The plan established three targets: a 6% reduction in emissions by 2014, 15% by 2020 and 80% by 2050. The government has committed to report annually on the actions it is taking to reduce emissions and adapt to climate change. [116]
The Toronto observatory ended in 1853, but the colonial government of the province of Canada took over the service and continued collecting climate data. On May 1, 1871, the new Dominion of Canada established the Meteorological Service of Canada by providing a $5000 grant to Professor G. T. Kingston of the University of Toronto to establish a ...
As part of the 2008 budget on February 26, 2008, $250 million was announced for research in developing more fuel-efficient vehicles and $300 million for the development a more advanced nuclear reactor and to improve safety at the Chalk River, Ontario Nuclear facility which shut down during the fall of 2007 after there were safety concerns.
The Edmonton City Hall is the home of the municipal government of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.Designed by Dub Architects, the building was completed in 1992.It was built to replace the former city hall designed by architects Kelvin Crawford Stanley and Maxwell Dewar in 1957, which had become outdated and expensive to operate.
The Edmonton Pedway system is a pedestrian network connecting office buildings, shopping centres, and parkades in downtown Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.It consists of approximately 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) of year-round climate-controlled tunnels, and walkways between the second floors of buildings, approximately 15 feet (4.6 m) above ground.