Trudeau announces supports for Ukraine, hydrogen deal with Europe as EU head visits

Hydrogen signage Source: iStock

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced more support for Ukraine and a new hydrogen agreement with Europe on Tuesday alongside European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

Canada will extend the Operation Unifier mission to provide engineering training in Ukraine until at least October, and Canadian medical trainers will be sent to help Ukrainian forces with combat medical skills.

“Canada is doing much more than its fair share already compared to others and is going way beyond what is necessary. So I want to thank Canada for that,'' von der Leyen said at a joint press conference with Trudeau in Kingston, Ont.

She added that the military training operation that Canada initiated in Ukraine in 2015 had an effect on the early successes of “much better trained'' Ukrainian troops after the Russian invasion began in February 2022.

Trudeau announced that Ottawa will spend $3 million to support the clearing of landmines and unexploded ordnance in Ukraine, on top of $32 million that was already committed toward mine action. The European Union is putting 43 million euros toward the same effort.

The EU has now designated Canada as a partner country on economic sanctions against Russia, and the two are working together to send Canadian energy transformers to support the Ukrainian electrical grid, seven of which will soon be delivered.

“For as long as it takes, we will stand shoulder to shoulder with our European partners for Ukraine,'' Trudeau said.

He was speaking at a press conference at CFB Kingston, which the pair toured Tuesday morning to meet with Canadian Armed Forces personnel who have deployed to Poland to help Ukrainian refugees.

The two leaders took stock of a relationship that has few irritants, and even closer co-operation a year after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

“We believe in the power of co-operation, solidarity, and multilateralism,'' von der Leyen said. ``We are not only partners; we are true friends.''

As part of that partnership, Trudeau announced that Ottawa had signed a new hydrogen agreement with the European Union.

“The enhanced action plan on hydrogen will mobilize investment, support businesses, share expertise and get clean Canadian hydrogen to Europe,'' said Trudeau. “Fundamentally, it's about good middle-class jobs, economic growth and clean energy.''

Von der Leyen said Canada is a “prime potential partner for hydrogen'' in Europe, such as through an already-announced, long-term deal with Germany.

As part of broader talks on climate change and clean energy, she said Canada and the EU have also been making progress on a critical minerals agreement signed in 2021.

She described the minerals as “the lifeblood of the clean economy,'' and said Canada could replace her continent's reliance on China.

“Europe needs to de-risk this dependency,'' she said, adding it needs to work with trusted partners – “first and foremost, Canada.''

To that end, the pair toured Li-Cycle, a lithium-ion battery recycler in Kingston to highlight the role critical minerals will play in a net-zero economy.

They are also looking at a joint “green alliance,'' von der Leyen said, that would focus on boosting energy and climate co-operation across the board.

She pushed back on the idea that Canada would be unable to help Europeans wean themselves off Russian gas due to a lack of East Coast export capacity for liquefied natural gas.

“We do not have the necessary infrastructure to link Canada directly with the European Union, but the increased production of LNG here in Canada helped the global market to supply enough LNG for those who needed it, for example the European Union,'' she said.

Von der Leyen said that LNG is a “bridge'' fuel that can come from countries where it makes sense to export energy.

“What comes in the future is up to the business sector.''

© 2023 The Canadian Press

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