US, Canada and Mexico sign clean energy pact by Staff Writers Ottawa (AFP) Feb 12, 2016 Canada, Mexico and the United States signed a draft agreement Friday to curb greenhouse gas emissions while increasing their energy interdependence. The deal will see the three nations working together to better coordinate their energy resources as they move "towards a continental approach to energy," Canadian Resources Minister Jim Carr told a joint news conference with his US and Mexican counterparts in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The memorandum of understanding commits the North American Free Trade Agreement partners to share data on energy supplies and distribution, as well as new clean energy initiatives, accelerate development of technologies such as carbon capture and storage, and improve energy efficiency across the continent. The trio will also collaborate on environmental stewardship. Working groups will be formed to hammer out the details of each segment of the plan, Carr said. Energy products worth Can$167 billion (US$119 billion) were traded across the continent in 2015, government figures show. According to the Canadian National Energy Board, benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude oil prices hit a six-year low in 2015, ending the year around $35 per barrel. Natural gas prices also remained low. But Canadian exports of electricity to the United States reached a record high. Meanwhile, both solar and wind generation increased but at a considerably slower pace than in previous years.
Obama calls Supreme Court emissions ruling 'unusual' In his first public reaction after the top court put the brakes on a sweeping plan to reduce emissions from coal-fueled power plants, Obama insisted the battle was not over. The plan underpins the US emissions reduction commitments under a global climate deal agreed by 195 governments in Paris last December. "I've heard people say, 'The Supreme Court struck down the clean power plant rule'," Obama told donors in California. "That's not true, so don't despair, people." "This is a legal decision that says, 'Hold on until we review the legality.'" Many Republican-controlled states opposed to Obama's plan had petitioned the Supreme Court to temporarily suspend its implementation until a final ruling is made. Experts say that final ruling is not likely before 2017. "We are very confident we are on strong legal footing here," Obama insisted. Obama's administration had expected legal challenges but had been surprised that a stay was enacted on plans that will take many years to come into full effect. "The Supreme Court did something unusual," Obama said referring to the ruling supported by five of the nine Supreme Court justices. Obama's "Clean Power Plan" would require the power sector to cut carbon dioxide emissions by at least 32 percent compared to 2005 levels by the year 2030. States that support efforts to curb climate change will still be able to press ahead with their plans. Obama's Republican foes, who currently control Congress, insist there is no evidence of climate change, or that a human role in global warming is unclear. Facing a Congressional roadblock, Obama has relied heavily on decades-old rules to force through regulation. "There are going to be people constantly pushing back and making sure we keep clinging to old dirty fuels and a carbon-emitting economic strategy that we need to be moving away from," Obama said.
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