New environment minister says his climate plan is not a ‘secret agenda’
OTTAWA — Newly minted Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said Wednesday there is nothing ‘really new” in the political rhetoric between Alberta and Ottawa around climate change this week, and shrugged off any suggestion his appointment will make that relationship more difficult than it already is.
Guilbeault is a former environmental activist from Quebec who has called the oilsands “dirty” and argued that pipelines and oil and gas expansion are not compatible with meeting Canada’s climate goals.
Elected in 2019, he was appointed to cabinet but not to the environment post many expected. Instead he spent the last two years as minister of heritage while former clean tech CEO Jonathan Wilkinson shepherded through net zero climate legislation and stronger greenhouse gas targets in the Environment Department.
There was talk in 2019 that Guilbeault’s appointment would have rubbed salt in the open sore that was the Ottawa-Alberta relationship. But that all changed Tuesday when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau majorly shook up his inner circle, moving Wilkinson to Natural Resources and Guilbeault into Environment.

