Ottawa set to relaunch federal green home retrofit program in 4 provinces
Ottawa set to relaunch federal green home retrofit program in 4 provinces
New version directed at low- and medium-income households, including renters
After a hiatus, the popular greener homes program is returning to Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Quebec and British Columbia, CBC News has learned.
Environment, Climate Change and Nature Minister Julie Dabrusin and Energy Minister Tim Hodgson are expected to announce on Monday morning the federal program’s relaunch in the four provinces.
"Over $500 million in funding, $300 million of which is federal, will be directed to help over 35,000 low- and median-income households reduce energy bills and greenhouse gas emissions through no-cost home retrofits such as heat pumps, insulation and air sealing,” according to a draft of the news release obtained by CBC News.
A previous version of the program, which ran out of cash, was open to homeowners. This new version will focus on low-to-median-income households and be open to homeowners and renters.
It’s been rebranded the Canada Greener Homes Affordability Program (CGHAP) and has already rolled out in Manitoba. The draft news release did not state when it could be accessed by Canadians in the five other provinces and three territories.
Federal greener homes program returns with focus on affordability
CBC News spoke with a senior federal source with knowledge of Monday’s announcement who said discussions are underway with the other jurisdictions.
The government's website also says CGHAP "will provide dedicated support to regional Indigenous governments and representative organizations" and that funds will come from existing agreements managed by Indigenous Services Canada and Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada.
Provinces to administer program
The program will now fall under a new federal department, Environment, Climate Change Canada, and be administered by the provinces instead of Ottawa.
The draft news release mentions that it will be delivered "in co-ordination with all four provinces, as well as with Hydro-Québec, B.C. Hydro, FortisBC and EfficiencyOne," based in Nova Scotia. It did not share details about the eligibility criteria or the maximum amount households could receive.
Dabrusin and Hodgson on Monday at 8.a.m. to make the announcement at the International Energy Agency's Global Conference on Energy Efficiency in Montreal. The senior federal source also confirmed that Dabrusin will now have responsibility for CGHAP, along with energy efficiency and electric vehicle charging files.
Ottawa's green grants program for homeowners is running out of money faster than expected
Federal government pulls plug on home retrofit loan program
The Canada Greener Homes Grant program, first launched by the federal government in 2021, provided homeowners with up to $5,000 for energy efficiency retrofits and home energy evaluations, as well as up to $600 to help cover the cost of those evaluations. Homeowners were required to spend the money and then be reimbursed.
The $2.6-billion program was supposed to last until 2027, or until funds were depleted, but the program closed in early 2024, and the government promised to bring it back.
Ottawa took heat from homeowners and the retrofitting industry for promising a program that would last for several years and then allowing it to lapse for nearly two years.
Senior reporter, Parliamentary Correspondent
David Thurton is a senior reporter in CBC's Parliamentary Bureau. He covers daily politics in the nation’s capital and specializes in environment and energy policy. Born in Canada but raised in Trinidad and Tobago, he’s moved around more times than he can count. He’s worked for CBC in several provinces and territories, including Alberta and the Northwest Territories. He can be reached at david.thurton@cbc.ca
Related Stories
AI News
'Overturn this'
33 minutes ago
AI News
Belgium ease past USA at 2026 World Cup | News | Official Site
33 minutes ago
AI News
Severe storms in China bring tornadoes and landslides that have killed 15 people
33 minutes ago
AI News
US
33 minutes ago
AI News
Nato summit begins with focus on defence spending as Zelenskyy and Trump due to meet
34 minutes ago
AI News
Despite change to lobbying rules, foreign governments and groups still funding MP travel
34 minutes ago
AI News
Going on a front lawn trinket trade tour
34 minutes ago
AI News
Report says traffickers exploit inspection gap at Canada's Pacific ports
34 minutes ago