We need to move ourselves and our goods without fossil fuels

Finding alternative ways to move ourselves and our goods without fossil fuels is critical in reducing emissions in our province.

Your choices to bike, walk, bus and carpool are important steps. But unfortunately they’re not enough. We need help from policy makers to help make transportation without fossil fuels a more realistic option for all Manitobans.

What would transportation without fossil fuels look like?

Looking for options to get started today?

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GoManitoba

Find a carpool partner in your area who is travelling to a similar destination (on a regular basis or for one-off trips such as festivals or events that are further away). Through GoManitoba you can even find cycling or bussing partners to assist you with commuting routes and tips.

Rules of the Road for Safe Cycling

A few tips to help make cycling safer for everyone

Sustainable Commuting Year Round

Tips from Green Action Centre’s Workplace Commuter Options Program

Manitoba’s Road to Resilience

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Given the current global political reality, there is serious doubt that the world will take the dramatic action required to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and remove carbon from the atmosphere at the scale and timeframe required by the IPCC 1.5°C Report.

Many Manitobans recognize the primary consequences of climate change (severe weather, floods, droughts, fires). Those same Manitobans see that those consequences have costs that are rising. What many people may not realize is that our ability to function and survive as a society is at risk.

Other disturbances (food shortages, climate migration, global conflicts) are exacerbated by climate change. The consequences of these disturbances may first be felt elsewhere, but we will feel them here due to their impacts on the global economy, supply chain, and availability and cost of obtaining financial credit. As long as we are dependent upon imported food and global supply chains for energy and essential goods, we are at risk. We are best off if we can provide for our essential needs ourselves.

Most governments are mainly concerned with being re-elected. Under the pretext of being “practical”, they have chosen not to publicly discuss the urgency and scale of work required to adequately address the climate crisis. It is up to civil society (the community) to think at this level and to show the way (or at least a way). We can “think the unthinkable.”

The objective of this document is to provide a decarbonization in Manitoba – zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

As we build that pathway we will be building our local resilience. Resilience means providing for our essential needs ourselves without fossil fuel.

To achieve true and adequate resilience, these are Manitoba’s essential objectives:

Food

Feed ourselves locally without fossil fuel fertilizers or diesel for machinery

Shelter

Heat all of our buildings (old and new) affordably without natural gas

Transportation

Move all goods and people without gasoline or diesel

Our hydroelectric resource will be a big part of building that resilience:

Electricity

Develop and use our electricity resource effectively, efficiently, equitably and affordably to meet those other three objectives

Road to Resilience Chapters

Intro

energy & electricity

buildings

human impacts

transportation

economy & green jobs

food & ag

natural spaces / wilderness