It's Climate Change I tell'ya!! IT'S CLIMATE CHANGE!!

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
After Alberta issued an emergency alert about the possibility of rolling blackouts because of high power demands on their grid during the extreme cold, Saskatchewan fired up their coal and gas plants to provide Alberta with an extra 153 MW of electricity through the night. Sask premier Scott Moe posted, “That power will be coming from natural gas and coal-fired plants, the ones the Trudeau government is telling us to shut down (which we won’t).”


Keep in mind BC is buying from Alberta because they are short on hydro..
.
 
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pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
27,702
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B.C.
After Alberta issued an emergency alert about the possibility of rolling blackouts because of high power demands on their grid during the extreme cold, Saskatchewan fired up their coal and gas plants to provide Alberta with an extra 153 MW of electricity through the night. Sask premier Scott Moe posted, “That power will be coming from natural gas and coal-fired plants, the ones the Trudeau government is telling us to shut down (which we won’t).”


Keep in mind BC is buying from Alberta because they are short on hydro..
.
At least site C will be coming on line sometime .
 
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Taxslave2

House Member
Aug 13, 2022
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Severe weather events threaten to drive insurance premiums higher: Experts
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Rosa Saba
Published Jan 12, 2024 • 3 minute read

The escalating risk of severe weather events is one of several factors putting pressure on insurance companies and potentially increasing premiums for consumers, experts say.


Extreme weather losses, inflation and reinsurance costs have all helped drive insurance premiums higher in recent years, said Craig Stewart, the Insurance Bureau of Canada’s vice-president of climate change and federal issues.


Severe weather caused more than $3.1 billion in insured damage in 2023, the bureau said, making it the fourth-worst year on record for insured losses.

“This grim statistic highlights the financial costs of a changing climate to insurers, governments and taxpayers,” the bureau said in a release.

The Okanagan and Shuswap-area wildfires in B.C. cost $720 million in insured damage, the bureau said, while severe summer storms in Ontario and spring ice storms in Ontario and Quebec cost a combined $670 million.


Rising building costs for materials and labour have also contributed to higher premiums over time, Stewart said.

“As we build more and more homes to address the affordability crisis, ironically, what we’re seeing is that materials and labour costs are going up,” he said — “because of inflation, but also because of increased demand.”

Globally, 2023 was the hottest year on record, according to European climate agency Copernicus.

Extreme weather events like wildfires and storm surge flooding tend to result in a higher volume of insurance claims, Ratehub.ca vice-president of insurance Matt Hands said in a statement.

“Climate change, along with the natural disasters, such as wildfires and flooding, continue to hit the insurance industry hard,” he said. “The insurance providers will need to balance these losses on their books, potentially leading to a rise in premiums for everyone.”


Canada is warming faster than the rest of the world and its insured losses are also growing faster than the rest of the world, said Nadja Dreff, senior vice-president and head of Canadian insurance at Morningstar DBRS.

Despite this, the underwriting profitability of Canadian insurers has held up pretty well in recent years, she said, “especially if you compare it to some of the global reinsurance players who have been absorbing the brunt of these extreme weather losses.”

But alongside severe weather losses and mounting costs to rebuild, there’s a third major factor influencing premiums: reinsurance, which is essentially insurance for insurers.

Canada is a higher-risk area for reinsurers than many other parts of the world, Stewart said.


For some regions, particularly Alberta and B.C., “reinsurers have raised their premiums for insurers operating in those areas,” he said.

“Insurers have absorbed part of that cost. But they also have passed on those increased costs to home insurance policies.”

In response to a “drastic rise” in reinsurance prices in 2023, insurers raised their thresholds for reinsurance to rein in costs, Dreff said.

“It may differ company to company, but in general, what we’ve seen is that insurers have been buying less reinsurance,” Dreff said. “In other words, reinsurance kicks in at higher levels of claims.”

That means the insurers would have to absorb more of their claims _ a trade-off with potential consequences that depend on how the year goes, she said.


According to a Morningstar DBRS outlook report published in December, premiums rose in 2022 and 2023 in the low-single digits.

Dreff expects premiums will continue to be pushed higher this year.

However, higher interest rates have improved investment outcomes, helping partially mitigate higher costs that might otherwise be passed on to consumers, she said.

Insurance costs are just one piece of a larger puzzle: the rising cost of living that Canadians have been grappling with for several years.

Climate risk, population growth and macroeconomic conditions support premium rate increases, but “they may prove to be more and more difficult to execute over time,” according to the Morningstar DBRS report.

“After years of rapidly increasing prices on a range of goods and services, consumers are finding it more difficult to absorb additional costs, including that of insurance, amid their growing concerns related to the cost of living.”


No one event drives up premiums, said Stewart, noting that a survey of insurers after the summer fires found no change in availability or affordability of wildfire insurance coverage. Instead, insurance pricing is driven by trends over time, he said.

Fire insurance is a core part of home coverage and highly unlikely to become unavailable, he said.

But escalating losses and revised risk modelling mean that many Canadians can’t access flood insurance, the bureau said in its report

The government has committed to a national flood insurance program, but progress on that has stalled, said Stewart.

“We are urging the federal government to put that program in place as soon as possible.”
Arson does come with a cost.
 
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spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Youth-led challenge of Ontario’s climate plan goes before province’s highest court
The lawsuit, backed by the environmental law charity Ecojustice, dates back to 2018

Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Jan 15, 2024 • Last updated 18 hours ago • 1 minute read

Seven young people are taking their challenge of Ontario’s climate change plan to the province’s highest court.


A lawyer for the group told the Court of Appeal for Ontario today that the case is about whether the province should be allowed to exacerbate the existential threat of climate change.


The group of young people between the ages of 16 and 28 have argued Ontario is breaking their Charter rights by setting emissions targets dangerously low, putting their futures at risk.

A trial judge last year dismissed the group’s constitutional challenge, but agreed the province’s plan falls “severely short of the scientific consensus” of what’s required to tackle climate change.

The lawsuit, backed by the environmental law charity Ecojustice, dates back to 2018 when the Progressive Conservative government revised its emissions target to 30 per cent below 2005 levels.


Experts for the group have said the revised target would allow for an additional 200 million tonnes of planet-warming emissions to be released.

A spokesperson for the government has previously said Ontario is leading the country’s progress on emissions reductions, including through investments in electric vehicle production and public transit expansion.

The appeal is part of a wave of youth-led climate litigation across Canada and other parts of the world where young people argue government inaction in the face of increasingly dire circumstances is a violation of their rights.

A Federal Court of Appeal ruling last month reopened the door for 15 young people to bring a constitutional challenge against the Canadian government over its response to climate change.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
113,256
12,777
113
Low Earth Orbit
Youth-led challenge of Ontario’s climate plan goes before province’s highest court
The lawsuit, backed by the environmental law charity Ecojustice, dates back to 2018

Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Jan 15, 2024 • Last updated 18 hours ago • 1 minute read

Seven young people are taking their challenge of Ontario’s climate change plan to the province’s highest court.


A lawyer for the group told the Court of Appeal for Ontario today that the case is about whether the province should be allowed to exacerbate the existential threat of climate change.


The group of young people between the ages of 16 and 28 have argued Ontario is breaking their Charter rights by setting emissions targets dangerously low, putting their futures at risk.

A trial judge last year dismissed the group’s constitutional challenge, but agreed the province’s plan falls “severely short of the scientific consensus” of what’s required to tackle climate change.

The lawsuit, backed by the environmental law charity Ecojustice, dates back to 2018 when the Progressive Conservative government revised its emissions target to 30 per cent below 2005 levels.


Experts for the group have said the revised target would allow for an additional 200 million tonnes of planet-warming emissions to be released.

A spokesperson for the government has previously said Ontario is leading the country’s progress on emissions reductions, including through investments in electric vehicle production and public transit expansion.

The appeal is part of a wave of youth-led climate litigation across Canada and other parts of the world where young people argue government inaction in the face of increasingly dire circumstances is a violation of their rights.

A Federal Court of Appeal ruling last month reopened the door for 15 young people to bring a constitutional challenge against the Canadian government over its response to climate change.
In going to sue the kids to triple my pensions and a bonus lump sum.
 
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Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
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Edmonton
If it fills. If it does its still not enough.
I recently heard a discussion about B.C hydro and if everyone in B.C. were (hypothetically) given an electric vehicle, they would have to build 9 Site C dams in order to support them "tomorrow!" Since this project has taken 30 years & it's still not completed, oh well....
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,027
3,812
113
Edmonton
After Alberta issued an emergency alert about the possibility of rolling blackouts because of high power demands on their grid during the extreme cold, Saskatchewan fired up their coal and gas plants to provide Alberta with an extra 153 MW of electricity through the night. Sask premier Scott Moe posted, “That power will be coming from natural gas and coal-fired plants, the ones the Trudeau government is telling us to shut down (which we won’t).”


Keep in mind BC is buying from Alberta because they are short on hydro..
.
According to the CBC this is shows how electric vehicles would be beneficial in this weather! Apparently they were serious!! LMAO I think the only thing it shows is how out of touch they are with reality!
 
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Taxslave2

House Member
Aug 13, 2022
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I recently heard a discussion about B.C hydro and if everyone in B.C. were (hypothetically) given an electric vehicle, they would have to build 9 Site C dams in order to support them "tomorrow!" Since this project has taken 30 years & it's still not completed, oh well....
And yet the dippers were bound and determines to kill the project when they seized power.