To Create Jobs and Cut Pollution, Governments Should Buy Clean

Buy Clean policies offer opportunities to reduce carbon emissions while supporting manufacturers, workers, and their communities across Canada.

We use them when building our roads and bridges, constructing our skyscraper office towers and condos, and they are the literal foundations of our housing stock, no matter what the size. Building materials— including aluminum, cement, steel, and wood— are in nearly everything we construct, and a vital economic backbone for Canada in more ways than one. 
 
The good news for us: when it comes to the carbon footprint of these construction materials, Canada has a unique advantage. Thanks in large part to our country’s clean electricity grid (which is now 82% emissions-free), goods produced here often have a smaller carbon footprint than those produced elsewhere. When you combine this with the efficiency of our manufacturers and the fact that it’s less polluting to ship materials across a land border than across an ocean, it becomes clear that Canada’s advantage is also its opportunity.
 
In addition to cutting pollution, “buying clean” and investing in public construction also creates jobs at a crucial time when our economy is in recovery. These employment and economic benefits are outlined in our latest report which recommends three actions to take advantage of Canada’s low-carbon advantage.

To learn more download the full report in English or French.

Blue Green Canada looks forward to supporting governments across the country to implement these achievable actions designed to capitalize on Canada’s domestic carbon advantage and support Canadian workers.
SHARE YOUR STORY

Related News

Blue Green Canada recognizes the importance of the passage of Bill C-50 as the legislative beginning toward ensuring Canada’s workers

The Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) has partnered with the Pembina Institute to release the second in a series of reports

From the Ground Up – SK Community Podcast Senior Program Manager Jamie Kirkpatrick in conversation with host Mark Bigland-Pritchard about

The Nature of Work is Changing

How has your job changed?

The Nature of Work is Changing

How has your job changed?
Share Your Story
1. Have there been any changes with your work because of climate change?
5. Do you ever get scared because of climate change?

Last Question

I give permission to Blue Green Canada to use my name and the answers and comments I have submitted above in their work.