Environmentalists have mixed reactions to Quebec-Ottawa caribou funding deal
MONTREAL — Environmentalists are divided on whether a new funding deal reached between Quebec and the federal government is a meaningful first step to saving the province’s dwindling caribou herds or a smokescreen that does little to protect the threatened species.
The agreement announced Tuesday will see Ottawa send Quebec $25 million over five years to spend on caribou conservation initiatives, as well as another $15 million to Indigenous communities who are implementing their own programs.
The deal signals an end to the years-long federal-provincial battle over caribou that began in 2022, when then-federal environment minister Steven Guilbeault threatened to act unilaterally to protect the herds if the province failed to submit a concrete plan to save them.
Ottawa’s threat drew strong condemnation from Quebec’s political class, who accused the Liberal federal government of trying to interfere in provincial jurisdiction. While Guilbeault renewed the threat in 2024, the federal government never issued a federal decree to protect caribou territory.


