The Impact Assessment Act (IAA), which was quietly passed in the final days of Trudeau’s majority government, grants sweeping power to Ministerial “Enforcement Officers.” But, until now, little has been explained about where and how Climate Police will be deployed.

The IAA empowers agents of the Ministry of Climate Change to enter premises without a warrant to “verify compliance or prevent non-compliance with [the Act].

Trudeau’s Climate Police may enter any project location that affects the environment to take photographs, access computer systems and communication devices, and “direct any person to put any machinery, vehicle or equipment in the place into operation or to cease operating it.” Climate Police may also prohibit access to the location entirely.

Such an agenda would require well-funded infrastructure like this Winnipeg facility to carry out extreme climate policies such as fertilizer reduction initiatives.

In fact, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that fertilizer use in Canada must be reduced by at least 30% in accordance with World Economic Forum (WEF) policies.

The government appears to be gearing up to crack down on businesses and individuals who violate WEF-linked climate policies meant to deindustrialize the West in the name of saving the Earth.

Of course, if the mass uprisings in Sri Lanka and the Netherlands are any indication, these climate and “Environment Social Governance” policies will only collapse countries and regions where they are implemented.
The Impact Assessment Act (IAA), which was quietly passed in the final days of Trudeau’s majority government, grants sweeping power to Ministerial “Enforcement Officers.” But, until now, little has been explained about where and how Climate Police will be deployed. The IAA empowers agents of the Ministry of Climate Change to enter premises without a warrant to “verify compliance or prevent non-compliance with [the Act]. Trudeau’s Climate Police may enter any project location that affects the environment to take photographs, access computer systems and communication devices, and “direct any person to put any machinery, vehicle or equipment in the place into operation or to cease operating it.” Climate Police may also prohibit access to the location entirely. Such an agenda would require well-funded infrastructure like this Winnipeg facility to carry out extreme climate policies such as fertilizer reduction initiatives. In fact, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that fertilizer use in Canada must be reduced by at least 30% in accordance with World Economic Forum (WEF) policies. The government appears to be gearing up to crack down on businesses and individuals who violate WEF-linked climate policies meant to deindustrialize the West in the name of saving the Earth. Of course, if the mass uprisings in Sri Lanka and the Netherlands are any indication, these climate and “Environment Social Governance” policies will only collapse countries and regions where they are implemented.
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