logo
Cardinal who worked closely with Pope Leo XIV travels to Canada to support G7 demonstrators

Cardinal who worked closely with Pope Leo XIV travels to Canada to support G7 demonstrators

CTV News11-06-2025
A Peruvian cardinal who worked closely with Pope Leo XIV for years will be stopping in Calgary to support demonstrators as world leaders gather next week for the G7 summit in Alberta.
Cardinal Pedro Ricardo Barreto Jimeno, 81, hopes to help draw attention to what he calls an 'ecological debt' crisis.
According to Barreto and organizers from Development and Peace and Caritas Canada, the group that invited the cardinal to Canada, ecological debt refers to the debt owed to poorer nations and Indigenous communities resulting from damage caused by some companies from developed countries like Canada. This damage includes oil spills and pollution from mines.
Development and Peace and Caritas Canada, the official humanitarian aid agency of the Canadian Catholic Church, invited the cardinal to support demonstrators in their campaign to call on G7 world leaders to prioritize the protection of the planet and poor communities.
Ahead of a speech before dozens of people at Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in Toronto on Monday, Barreto spoke with CTVNews.ca through an interpreter about ecological debt.
'It's a very large injustice that the World Bank recognizes,' the Spanish-speaking cardinal said. He pointed to a World Bank 2023 debt report that found developing countries spent a record US$1.4 trillion servicing their foreign debt, as interest costs soared to a 20-year high of $406 billion. For many countries, this move would cut budgets in areas such as health and education.
Barreto hopes developed countries like Canada will recognize their ecological debt to poorer countries. He and other environmental advocates are calling on Canada and other countries to cancel 'unjust and unsustainable debts' and help reform the global financial system.
'My hope, which is the hope of the church, is that the leaders of the northern rich countries will assume their responsibility in this situation,' he said. 'They have a really clear opportunity here to have a change in mentality towards debt.'
Direction of Leo papacy
Barreto, a Jesuit like Pope Francis, says he, Leo and others in the Catholic Church hope to continue Francis's legacy of emphasizing care for the marginalized and environment.
While he didn't vote in the conclave last month — Barreto is older than the 80-year-old cutoff — he said he participated in meetings with cardinals leading up to Leo's election, in which they 'insisted' that the new pope must continue the same path as Francis of looking after the Earth.
Cardinal's plans in Calgary
The cardinal will be a guest of honour at the G7 Jubilee People's Forum in Calgary from June 12 to 15 before the summit in Kananaskis. Activists and faith communities from across Canada and around the world will gather and participate in talks about ecological debt during the forum.
Barreto, metropolitan archbishop emeritus of Huancayo, Peru, is known for his advocacy for the environment and poor in Peru and Latin America.
Francis made Barreto a cardinal in 2018. According to The College of Cardinals Report, a website featuring profiles of cardinals compiled by independent Catholic journalists and researchers, Barreto is also known for his 'outspoken generally liberal views on national politics,' even facing death threats for speaking out against a smelter causing pollution that threatened the health of people in the Andes Mountains.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What could be in store for Edmonton's vacant Hudson's Bay spaces
What could be in store for Edmonton's vacant Hudson's Bay spaces

CTV News

time3 hours ago

  • CTV News

What could be in store for Edmonton's vacant Hudson's Bay spaces

Department stores closing is nothing new. It was 1993 when once-prominent western Canadian retailer Woodward's went bankrupt and closed all its locations, including four in Edmonton. Hudson's Bay acquired most of Woodward's former stores and put Bays in them, including at West Edmonton Mall, which for four years hosted two of the major anchor's locales on the east and west ends of the mall before renovating the latter space into a movie complex and smaller retail spaces. A similar scenario occurred in 1999, when local malls quickly filled the spaces vacated by Eaton's after the major Canadian retailer's bankruptcy. But that was then. More than a quarter century later, it takes longer for Edmonton's indoor shopping destinations to replace tenants in department store spaces. Hudson's Bay went out of business earlier this year, shuttering local stores in West Edmonton Mall, Southgate Centre, Kingsway Mall, Londonderry Mall and St. Albert Centre. It's been less than a month since The Bay went extinct and vacated their long-time homes – it was an original tenant at four of the remaining area sites – so it's understandable that the owners of the malls are grappling with what to do with the more than one million square feet of retail space and not already announcing plans. Spokespeople for both West Edmonton Mall and Kingsway owner Oxford Properties told CTV News Edmonton on Tuesday they don't yet have news to share on what'll replace their Hudson's Bay spots. Hudson's Bay A storefront of the vacant Hudson's Bay department store at West Edmonton Mall on July 30, 2025. (Craig Ellingson/CTV News Edmonton) Both malls have long dealt with filling retail space vacated by department stores, Kingsway as recently as 2022, when Walmart moved into its former Sears space, while a Toyota dealership relocated to the main floor of West Edmonton Mall's old Sears locale the year before to join The Brick, which had taken over the top floor of it in 2019. Montreal-based real estate firm Leyad, owner of Londonderry Mall and St. Albert Centre, and Southgate co-owners Primaris REIT and La Caisse (formerly known as Ivanhoé Cambridge) did not reply to inquiries about the future of their now-vacant Edmonton-area Bay stores. Hudson's Bay A boarded-up entrance to the Hudson's Bay department store at Edmonton's Southgate Centre on July 30, 2025. (Craig Ellingson/CTV News Edmonton) One wrinkle in the future of the spaces is the effort by B.C. billionaire Ruby Liu to acquire 25 of Hudson's Bay's leases. On Tuesday, in the latest development of the judicial saga unfolding in Ontario, the collapsed retailer asked the court to force landlords to accept Liu's bid to assume the leases, which include those in West Edmonton Mall and Southgate, in her quest to establish her own department store empire. Liu's attempt to acquire the leases will cost Liu about $69 million. The filing of the motion in Ontario Superior Court sets up a potential fight between the Bay and its various landlords. Hudson's Bay An entrance door to the vacant Hudson's Bay department store at Edmonton's Southgate Centre on July 30, 2025. (Craig Ellingson/CTV News Edmonton) The odds are that both West Ed and Kingsway will eventually fill the empty spots. They're the city's two largest malls – and in WEM's case, arguably Edmonton's biggest tourist draw – and the examples of what shopping centres do to fill vacancies in ever-turbulent retail times, given the rapid rise of online shopping and delivery from the likes of Amazon Prime, are numerous. That includes what local malls, particularly West Ed, have done over the years to fill spaces as large-format stores continue to close. Here are a few possible, realistic uses for the Bay spaces. Pickleplex A state-of-the-art, seven court pickleball facility will open at the former Sears at the Georgian Mall in Barrie, Ont. (Supplied) Pickleball courts A paddle sport that's grown in popularity over the last decade continues to increase its footprint inside malls. Pickleball court facilities have been installed in former store spaces across the U.S. and Canada in recent years. Retail strategist David Ian Gray says putting sports facilities in former department store spaces is 'one of the hot ones right now,' although he suspects such facilities will be overbuilt and 'be a problem in a number of years,' with pickleball leading the way. 'That's the trending use of that kind of space, especially when the outdoor versions carry a lot of noise that neighbours aren't too happy with,' Gray told CTV News Edmonton. 'Having something indoor and soundproof is in demand right now.' World Trade Center Retail Revival Eataly In this Aug. 15, 2016 file photo, freshly baked breads are displayed at the entrance to Eataly in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan) More dining Most malls feature a food court, but more may choose to add higher-end options and restaurants. Not unlike West Edmonton Mall's Bourbon Street, shopping centres could opt to reimagine their empty Bay spaces to accommodate more food options, Gray said. 'We're seeing a lot more advanced dining,' he said. 'Good restaurants, food courts becoming food halls in which you have good chefs operating their space, and making nicer dining environments, hoping people can come there to eat and then they'll spend some time shopping.' Retail analyst Bruce Winder said large-format grocer/restaurant concepts such as Eataly, an Italian food destination with 13 stores in the U.S. and 11 outside it, including one in Toronto, could be a fit for some malls. Flex space Both Winder and Lisa Hutcheson, the managing partner of retail consultancy firm J.C. Williams Group, say malls are booking temporary exhibits and experiences for their large, vacant spaces. Local malls such as West Edmonton Mall and Kingsway have both hosted such experiences in the past but not necessarily using a space the size of a department store. Hutcheson gave examples of pop-up roller-skating events, interactive museum/art gallery installations and product tie-ins such as the immersive World of Barbie as types of experiences seen in other places. Southgate Centre The entrance to the Dollarama store at Southgate Centre on July 30, 2025. The lower-level space was once home to a branch of the Edmonton Public Library. (Craig Ellingson/CTV News Edmonton) Libraries There are malls in the city that host libraries already – Londonderry and Abbottsfield have locations inside them, while Mill Woods Town Centre and Bonnie Doon have libraries close by in stand-alone buildings nearby – but this back-to-the-future idea makes sense as libraries and malls alike are reimagining themselves as their worlds change, Hutcheson says. 'I think we're going to start to see much more entertainment and community kind of elements,' Hutcheson told CTV News Edmonton. 'We're even seeing libraries coming back into some shopping centres as part of the community, not necessarily in downtown markets, but in more suburban (areas), because libraries are actually being reinvented as well. They're not your old library (that's) shushing everybody. They're very community-based, really interactive spaces.' Libraries once occupied space inside Edmonton malls such as Southgate, Capilano and Mill Woods Town Centre. Oakridge Mall redevelopment Redevelopment on the Oakridge Mall site in Vancouver, B.C., on Feb. 21, 2024. (Ethan Cairns/The Canadian Press) Divide up space, build something new Malls could simply do what several have done already: redevelop the Bay spaces to accommodate more retail units. It's something West Edmonton Mall did in 1999 with the old Woodward's/Bay space at the west end of the property to create the SilverCity theatre complex (now Scotiabank Theatre) and additional retail, Kingsway in 2017 with the former Target/Zellers space and Southgate in 2022 in repurposing the old Sears/Eatons/Woodwards site. Gray said this move is being made elsewhere, including downtown Vancouver's Pacific Centre, where the former Nordstrom/Sears/Eatons will be parcelled into four retail spaces. Winder said the malls could also consider tearing down the Bay spaces and building something new instead. 'What some malls are doing is they're putting condominiums,' he said. 'They're tearing down some of these areas and creating a mixed-use mall where you have a few towers in the parking lot. I've seen parking lots shrink, and they put towers in and create instant customers, if you will, who just go downstairs (to shop and access services.)' It's that kind of idea that's in proposed plans for the likes of Bonnie Doon and Mill Woods Town Centre, concepts that Winder says are a throwback to commerce of old. 'Think about shopping 200, 300 years ago – we weren't around, obviously – but that's kind of the way shopping was,' he said. 'You go to a marketplace and under one roof you have everything you need. Some people live nearby and they get food, they get entertainment, they get music, they get products. 'We're almost gravitating a bit to that sort of mixed-use marketplace. Again.'

Alberta cities face higher election costs this fall after province bans electronic vote counters
Alberta cities face higher election costs this fall after province bans electronic vote counters

CBC

time5 hours ago

  • CBC

Alberta cities face higher election costs this fall after province bans electronic vote counters

As municipalities around Alberta prepare for local elections this fall, some cities are projecting higher costs and longer wait times in light of new rules set out by the province last year. When the Alberta government passed Bill 20, it banned the use of electronic vote tabulators, a method some cities have used to count ballots in every municipal election for decades. The vote counting machines speed up the process, allowing municipalities to save money and offer results to the public more quickly, compared to counting votes manually. But counting votes by hand is what every municipality will need to do this fall, and some cities are looking at costs double or triple what they spent in the 2021 municipal elections. The rise is partly due to increased staffing municipalities will need to count ballots in a process that could last much longer than the public is used to waiting to hear results. Since introducing Bill 20, the province has maintained that manually counting votes will better maintain voters' trust in election integrity. But Alberta Municipalities president Tyler Gandam said he hasn't seen evidence to back up that assertion, and he's frustrated municipalities weren't consulted more about how to run their own elections. "We're using automated tellers for grocery stores and retail, we're using these kinds of machines for testing in schools. I'm just not seeing the data that supports that there's going to be a higher level of confidence in an election result through hand-counting versus a voting machine," said Gandam. He added that large population centres will especially feel the strain of manual counts. Voter turnout in Calgary and Edmonton in 2021 saw hundreds of thousands of votes cast, and with the population growth Alberta has seen in the years since then, Gandam said the strain of even more ballots to count could be placed on elections staff this fall. Rising costs to operate elections Within the last year, several municipalities around Alberta have released projections of how much more they expect to spend to operate local elections. Last October, City of Edmonton officials projected nearly $5 million in extra costs will be needed to run this fall's election. Further south, a recent report commissioned by the City of Lethbridge expects its election to cost the city roughly twice as much as in 2021, largely due to hiring 300 to 400 additional workers. Red Deer as well, with an additional $940,000 planned. And in Medicine Hat, the city's budget of $400,000 for the election is up from an initial $270,000 projection, while it also plans to cut the number of polling stations it opens in half, from 20 to 10, as a way to contain costs. In St. Albert, the city's elections budget has tripled to $930,700, compared to $261,200 in 2021. The City of Calgary said will not publicize how much it expects to spend in this fall's election until it can confirm a final number, which it expects to do in September. The municipal election is scheduled for Oct. 20. Added cost a burden we pay for transparent democracies: provincial minister Municipal Affairs Minister Dan Williams said he's "very happy" even despite increased costs, to improve election integrity "That's the burden we pay here in the west for having transparent and open democracies," Williams said in an interview on Thursday. "I think it's business as usual." Williams argued only five or six municipalities have raised the vote counter ban as an issue to him since he became municipal affairs minister in May, adding that it's how federal election ballots are already counted. Most Alberta municipalities aren't worried about having to count votes by hand, Williams said, and are instead "dealing with work they should be dealing with," such as water delivery, filling potholes, attracting investment and keeping taxes down. "I wish luck to every single [municipal] candidate so that they can do the work that they need to, which is, to be honest, not worrying about if we should have vote tabulators," said Williams. "The province has decided for certainty in our elections and confidence in the way that we run our municipal elections, this is the best way to do it. It's how we decide to do it at the federal level, it's how we decide to do it at the provincial level, it's also good enough for our municipalities. That's the priority of this government, and the priority of municipalities should be making sure that those basic services are being rendered to all the ratepayers." But Bonnie Hilford, Lethbridge's city clerk, points out her city has used electronic tabulators in every election for more than 30 years without hearing concerns about election integrity. "We've been using tabulators in the city of Lethbridge since 1989, and we've never had a challenge or a contested election," said Hilford. "We're kind of wondering why we have to move to hand-counting, which will take a lot longer [and] cost a lot more." Because voters in Lethbridge select more than one candidate for city council and school trustee roles, Hilford said the city expects the public won't receive full election results for two days after polling stations close. The added wait time for results, coupled with increased staffing costs, has pushed Lethbridge city council to advocate for the province to reverse course. Hilford said she expects council to take that same position after this year's election, as a way to try and save taxpayers' money. Advocacy expected to continue after election Along with his role at Alberta Municipalities, Gandam is also the mayor of Wetaskiwin, a city of roughly 13,400 people. Wetaskiwin previously counted votes manually as a cost-effective alternative to vote tabulators, but Gandam said they paid for it in the length of time it required. When the city struggled to recruit enough reliable elections staff in 2021, Gandam said they decided to begin using vote counters in its next election as a more efficient and reliable method. But now the province has blocked that move. Last fall, Alberta Municipalities members voted to adopt a resolution calling for a reversal on the province's ban of vote-counting machines. Gandam said the organization plans to connect with its members after this year's elections, and bring any relevant concerns to the province to potentially make changes before the next election in 2029. Williams said he's interested in seeing the vote tabulator ban continue, but that he's open to having that conversation with municipalities. "If municipalities do bring it up as their biggest concern, not funding for wastewater, not making sure they can lower taxes … then I'll hear that conversation, if this is their priority coming out of the election," said Williams.

Companies take concrete steps toward capturing revenues from carbon dioxide
Companies take concrete steps toward capturing revenues from carbon dioxide

Globe and Mail

time18 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

Companies take concrete steps toward capturing revenues from carbon dioxide

It can be used to make fuel, fertilizer, building material and even soap, but can carbon dioxide be a money-maker, too? Carbon capture has long been a focus of emissions reduction efforts in Canada. It involves collecting the climate-warming gas from industrial sites and preventing it from entering the atmosphere, most often by stowing it away permanently underground. Less common has been capturing CO2 and making it into something useful. 'Carbon utilization does not have a big history. It's relatively nascent,' said Apoorv Sinha, chief executive of Carbon Upcycling. The Calgary-based company combines industrial waste products with carbon dioxide to make a cement-like product that can be used in concrete foundations and sidewalks. 'Canada actually punches well above its weight in carbon-to-value across the building material sector, even in carbon chemicals,' he said. Ottawa spending $21.5-million to develop five Alberta carbon-capture projects Storing carbon has been the automatic go-to as industry has a wealth of experience doing it at a large scale, said David Sanguinetti, interim CEO at cleantech incubator Foresight Canada. While carbon utilization has the benefit of generating direct revenues from usable products, the economics are uncertain in a lot of cases, he said. 'It's either niche or not great right now with the current state of technology,' he said. 'If you don't have a price on carbon, then a lot of the current concepts that are out there, which are technically feasible – people have done it in the lab, they've proven it out – there isn't an economic driver to make it happen.' The Canadian Gas Association commissioned a report from Foresight Canada last year into the carbon utilization market, which concluded that storing carbon from large industrial emitters is likely to beat out using it – at least for the time being. Foresight sees southwestern Ontario being a good spot for carbon utilization to take root as there are clusters of large emitters and innovation hubs, but little in the way of infrastructure for underground storage like Alberta has. CO2 utilization falls into two categories – direct use or conversion. Direct use includes the long-standing practice of injecting the gas into mature oilfields to draw more barrels to the surface. With conversion, the chemical makeup of the gas is altered to make products like aviation fuel and fertilizer. At a smaller scale, Calgary-based CleanO2 captures the gas from building heating systems and turns it into pearl ash used in its hand soap, shampoo and other products. Analysis: Carney tied carbon capture to new pipelines. Here's how it could finally get built One of the more promising applications has been using the gas in building materials so it's trapped permanently. Last week, Carbon Upcycling held a groundbreaking ceremony at the Ash Grove cement plant in Mississauga, where work on a commercial demonstration project is under way. Production is to begin next spring. CarbiCrete, based in Montreal, has developed technology for greener precast masonry and hardscapes – think concrete blocks, retaining walls and paving stones that can be sent to a construction site, not the ready-mix stuff churning in a truck's drum. Concrete is traditionally made up of cement, aggregate like rocks or gravel, and water. 'It's the most abundant manmade substance on the planet,' said Yuri Mytko, CarbiCrete's chief marketing officer. 'But cement has traditionally been the key ingredient and cement is hugely problematic in that it accounts for about eight per cent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions.' CarbiCrete uses steelmaking slag instead of cement, and cures it in a chamber with CO2 instead of applying heat and steam. 'You're left with a concrete product that has the same properties as cement-based concrete, except with none of the emissions associated with it and also with carbon having been permanently mineralized and removed from the atmosphere,' said Mr. Mytko. CarbiCrete licenses its technology to concrete product makers and helps them retrofit their plants. Dave Sawyer, principal economist at the Canadian Climate Institute said utilization can work by helping companies generate credits to sell, but it's a relatively small piece of the emissions-reduction picture. Carbon capture, utilization and storage in general has been painted by business and industry as 'one big silver bullet technology,' he said, but there are other emissions-busting approaches that should be getting more attention. For example, sodium ion batteries may be just as technically feasible as carbon capture, utilization and storage – and maybe cheaper. 'But we just keep going to this big lumpy thing ... that is really cost prohibitive,' Mr. Sawyer said. Mr. Sinha said carbon utilization gets a fraction of the support and resources of traditional storage projects, whose technology has been around for decades. 'What needs to happen is more support and a larger focus towards deploying these technologies quickly and testing them out. Because right now, just the amount of data – how to build these facilities, how to operate them – very little of it exists.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store