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      • Millions of people are under a heat warning in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic provinces, with Environment and Climate Change Canada warning that temperatures could reach as high as 35 C. The weather service is warning of "dangerously hot and humid conditions" in parts of Ontario and Quebec in particular. Here's what you need to know.
      www.cbc.ca/news/climate/ontario-quebec-environment-canada-heat-wave-1.7237102
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  2. Jan 25, 2024 · Most homes that heat with oil are in Quebec (465,000), Ontario (267,000) and the Atlantic provinces (287,000). Approximately 25 percent of households in Atlantic Canada currently heat with oil, compared to approximately six percent across the rest of Canada.

  3. Jun 18, 2024 · New enhancements have been made to the program to make it easier to apply and more cost effective for low-to-median households throughout Canada to switch from oil heating to heat pumps. Check if your income level is eligible. Participating provinces and territories have an agreement with the federal government for delivery of the OHPA program ...

  4. Jun 18, 2024 · To be eligible, you must be heating your home with oil, sign up to the OHPA program and get pre-approved with your provincial or territorial program for an eligible heat pump system. Once eligibility has been verified, a cheque will be mailed to the applicant.

    • Where Are Fossil Fuel Heating Bans Happening in Canada So Far?
    • Why Are Fossil Fuels For Heating Being Banned Now?
    • How Would Banning Fossil Fuel Heating Help Canada and The World Reach Net Zero?
    • How Would Banning Fossil Fuel Heating Help to Cut Methane Emissions?
    • What Is Replacing Fossil Fuel Heating?
    • Are Similar Bans Being Implemented in Other Parts of The World?
    • Why Is New Construction Being Targeted?
    • What Is The Natural Gas Industry's Response to Bans?
    • Are These Gas Bans working? and Are They Enough?

    At least two jurisdictions have implemented recent restrictions on fossil fuel heating: 1. Vancouver: Starting Jan. 1, 2022, equipment for space and hot water heating in new low-rise residential buildings must be zero emissions. By 2025, all new and replacement heating and hot water systems must be zero emissions. 2. Quebec: Starting Dec. 31, 2021,...

    It's happening now because of attempts to: 1. reach net-zero emissions. 2. drastically cut methane. Reaching net-zero emissions by 2050 is a key goal of the Paris Agreement on climate change. Canada itself has also committed to reaching net-zero emissions by 2050. During the recent United Nations COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Canada and more tha...

    In 2019, buildings were the third largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in Canada, after oil and gas and transport. Space and water heating represent about 85 per cent of residential greenhouse gas emissions and 68 per cent of commercial emissions. A 2021 report from the Canadian Institute for Climate Choiceson different ways to get Canada to ...

    Methane is emitted in the production of all fossil fuels, including coal and heavy oil, even if it isn't collected for use in the process. It's also the main component — 95 per cent — of natural gas, the source of 52 per cent of the energy used to heat Canadian homes in 2018. Chris Bataille is an associate researcher with the Institute for Sustaina...

    In most cases, fossil fuel combustion is being replaced with electric heating. That can include more traditional but less efficient options, such as baseboard heaters and electric furnaces. However, there has been a big push to instead choose more efficient heat pumps. The Canadian Institute for Climate Choices report found that to drive deeper emi...

    Yes. They're most widespread in Europe,which imports 90 per cent of its gas, mostly from Russia, representing a strategic vulnerability beyond climate change itself. Some of the leaders include Denmark, which banned installation of oil-fired boilers and natural gas heating in new buildings in 2013, and is now subsidizing the electrification of olde...

    New construction is being targeted largely because electrification of a new home is cheap and relatively simple, Bataille said. He estimates it would add between $5,000 and $20,000 to the cost of a home, which is "virtually nothing" on the scale of the total average Canadian home price of $720,850. In comparison, retrofitting an older home could co...

    The industry has lobbied hard against them. There are now state laws pre-emptively outlawing municipal gas bans in close to 20 U.S. states, eliminating one option for local climate action, Henchen said. "These are certainly backed and encouraged by the gas industry, which is concerned about losing some of their market and especially some of their g...

    "They definitely work in eliminating the burning of fossil fuels in new buildings," Henchen said. But both he and Bataille acknowledged that they're not enough to decarbonize cities. Henchen said governments also need to stop allowing gas companies to subsidize the expansion of gas infrastructure and the connection of new customers through existing...

  5. Jan 18, 2024 · While the heat pump grants are available in all provinces, only Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and P.E.I. are currently getting the grant increase, because they're also the only ones with a...

  6. Dec 22, 2023 · Additional details will be announced on the strengthened Oil to Heat Pump Affordability program with the Governments of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island for households in these provinces in the coming weeks. There are oil-heated households in all provinces and territories in Canada.

  7. Apr 14, 2023 · How did the Maritime provinces become Canadas heat pump vanguard? What conditions, policies and market forces have driven that increased uptake, and what lessons can they provide about how to drive heat pump adoption across the country?

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