Mark Carney
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
There is so much more to do to secure Canada, to invest in Canada, to build Canada, to unite Canada. That's why I'm asking for a strong, positive mandate from my fellow Canadians. I've just requested that the Governor General dissolve Parliament and call an election for April 28th. And she has agreed.
It's about getting things done. It's about getting, yes, pipelines built across this country so that we can displace imports of foreign oil. It's about building out the energy infrastructure more broadly here in Alberta, which I would add would include projects such as the pathways. It's about building energy corridors and trade corridors, including potentially up from here through to Nunavut.
It's about getting things done. It's about getting, yes, pipelines built across this country so that we can displace imports of foreign oil. It's about building out the energy infrastructure more broadly here in Alberta, which I would add would include projects such as the pathways. It's about building energy corridors and trade corridors, including potentially up from here through to Nunavut.
It's about getting things done. It's about getting, yes, pipelines built across this country so that we can displace imports of foreign oil. It's about building out the energy infrastructure more broadly here in Alberta, which I would add would include projects such as the pathways. It's about building energy corridors and trade corridors, including potentially up from here through to Nunavut.
So we have additional deep water ports and opportunities there. And so the commitment, and the commitment is to deliver those, and then the federal government using all of its power in order to accelerate delivering those projects. So then it gets into details of what's changed here and there, but the commitment is to deliver faster at a different scale.
So we have additional deep water ports and opportunities there. And so the commitment, and the commitment is to deliver those, and then the federal government using all of its power in order to accelerate delivering those projects. So then it gets into details of what's changed here and there, but the commitment is to deliver faster at a different scale.
So we have additional deep water ports and opportunities there. And so the commitment, and the commitment is to deliver those, and then the federal government using all of its power in order to accelerate delivering those projects. So then it gets into details of what's changed here and there, but the commitment is to deliver faster at a different scale.
And if I may just add one other thing, I said a week ago or 10 days ago that we need to do things that had not been imagined or had not been thought possible at a speed we haven't seen before. And that's the nature of the time. And in order to do that,
And if I may just add one other thing, I said a week ago or 10 days ago that we need to do things that had not been imagined or had not been thought possible at a speed we haven't seen before. And that's the nature of the time. And in order to do that,
And if I may just add one other thing, I said a week ago or 10 days ago that we need to do things that had not been imagined or had not been thought possible at a speed we haven't seen before. And that's the nature of the time. And in order to do that,
we're going to need to use at the federal level, not just a commitment for cooperation, which we have under my government, but also additional levers that we create. And I'll be laying some of those out tomorrow with the premiers.
we're going to need to use at the federal level, not just a commitment for cooperation, which we have under my government, but also additional levers that we create. And I'll be laying some of those out tomorrow with the premiers.
we're going to need to use at the federal level, not just a commitment for cooperation, which we have under my government, but also additional levers that we create. And I'll be laying some of those out tomorrow with the premiers.
And who are our clients for that? Who are customers? Do we only have one customer to the south of us, the customer that's attacking us? that doesn't respect the trade agreements that they signed? Or should we develop new customers, new customers in Europe? What's required, if I may, what's required for those new customers
And who are our clients for that? Who are customers? Do we only have one customer to the south of us, the customer that's attacking us? that doesn't respect the trade agreements that they signed? Or should we develop new customers, new customers in Europe? What's required, if I may, what's required for those new customers
And who are our clients for that? Who are customers? Do we only have one customer to the south of us, the customer that's attacking us? that doesn't respect the trade agreements that they signed? Or should we develop new customers, new customers in Europe? What's required, if I may, what's required for those new customers
is to build out trade corridors and infrastructure, including what I referenced in my previous answer and discussed with the Premier, is the potential to go north, go to new deepwater ports. Churchill is an example. Grey's Point in Nunavut as another. And that creates a whole new set of opportunities
is to build out trade corridors and infrastructure, including what I referenced in my previous answer and discussed with the Premier, is the potential to go north, go to new deepwater ports. Churchill is an example. Grey's Point in Nunavut as another. And that creates a whole new set of opportunities
is to build out trade corridors and infrastructure, including what I referenced in my previous answer and discussed with the Premier, is the potential to go north, go to new deepwater ports. Churchill is an example. Grey's Point in Nunavut as another. And that creates a whole new set of opportunities
for Albertans as a whole, for people across the country, for these hardworking people around me and those like them in the trades. And that's what my job is.