We certainly should not console ourselves that RCP8.5 is beyond our reach just because the present estimate of fossil
fuel resources appears insufficient.
Not exact matches
While axing a tax on the
fuel Albertans produce is popular, much of the energy sector
appears reasonably happy a provincial government is doing things to erase Alberta's old image as an environmental laggard; last month, oil sands heavyweights Suncor and Canadian Natural
Resources Ltd. talked up Alberta's new environmental efforts to European investors, and their executives joined Notley on stage when the climate change plan and carbon tax were first announced.
Hydrogen does n`t
appear in nature as a
fuel; it has to be refined from or manufactured from other energy
resources (such as fossil
fuels, nuclear, wind or solar).
If that results in misallocation of
resources we should review the subsidies, but at the moment they
appear to be fixing some of the current misallocation of
resources towards fossil
fuels, so they're a good thing.