Quebec gives the green light to large polluting construction sites to help the economy

The Legault government will not require the reduction of greenhouse gases during the construction of its largest road projects, our Bureau of Investigation discovered, despite the efforts of the MTQ to hide the information.

• Read also: Fewer major green road projects than promised

• Read also: 3rd carbon neutral link: Quebec will offset pollution by planting trees

Use of hybrid and electric vehicles on the worksite, reuse of residual materials and reduction of deforestation: several measures have been planned to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions during the repair of the Louis-H.-La tunnel Fountain.

However, in the name of economic recovery, these efforts will no longer be required for the other “carbon neutral” sites of the Ministère des Transports du Québec (MTQ). This concerns at least six major construction sites and possibly regarding fifteen others.

In 2019, the MTQ adopted a directive to make its major road construction sites carbon neutral. This means that construction is done by trying to reduce GHGs and offsetting what is impossible to eliminate by planting trees or buying carbon credits.


The Minister of Transport, François Bonnardel.

Photo archives, QMI Agency

The Minister of Transport, François Bonnardel.

But the Legault government wants to speed up construction and believes that this approach would have slowed it down. The ministry will therefore limit itself to offsetting GHG emissions at the end of construction.

“Carbon neutrality is an accounting operation and it is only credible if we have made the reduction beforehand, warns Claude Villeneuve, director of Carbone Boréal, a compensation and research program at the University of Quebec at Chicoutimi. I can’t run my stopped car all day and pay the carbon credits followingwards. It doesn’t make sense.”

“You can be carbon neutral [sans réduire les GES]but it will cost more because you will have emitted more during the project and you will have to compensate more”, he adds.

Hidden Info

We learned of the ministry’s new direction through an access to information request, among several things the MTQ was trying to hide.

“The full application of the steps planned for carbon neutrality (i.e. the step of developing a reduction scenario) might not be completed without delaying the implementation of the project,” indicates a draft response from the MTQ, which was blocked and then modified.

In an internal email, the director of communications, Julie Berthold, insists that the answers do not give the impression that the environment is sidelined.

“We must at all costs avoid that the message that might be perceived is the fact that since we are accelerating the projects, we do not have time to do the carbon neutrality steps properly,” she explains.

“It seems to me that we have to focus our response much more on the fact that we had so many more major projects to orchestrate […]that it was impossible (lack of manpower) to follow the carbon neutrality process.”

A “hoax”

Offsetting GHGs does not necessarily make a project green. In the case of the Turcot interchange, the trees planted will take 100 years to capture the equivalent of the pollution from the construction site and the carbon credits that were purchased from a controversial Indian hydroelectric project.

“Emissions offsetting is a hoax, it doesn’t work, and the creation of offset projects will only delay the adoption of concrete measures to reduce emissions,” said Patrick Bonin of Greenpeace.

Note that the government had also reduced its target for the number of carbon neutral projects.

WHAT IS CARBON NEUTRALITY?

For a project to be carbon neutral, it must first attempt to reduce or eliminate GHG emissions. If this is not possible, emissions can be offset by buying credits on the carbon market. These credits are held by a project that helps clean up, such as planting trees or producing green energy.

The MTQ is committed to making its construction sites carbon neutral. Only the emissions from the machinery used for the work and the transportation of the materials will be offset, and not those from the vehicles that will travel on the new facilities.

“Emissions offsetting and carbon neutrality claims do not prevent carbon from being emitted into the atmosphere in the short term and warming the planet. They just take pollution off the books of polluters and irresponsible governments,” says Patrick Bonin of Greenpeace.

In 2009, the MTQ estimated that the Turcot jobsite would generate 17,000 metric tons of GHGs. There were 7 times more, or 121,000 tons.

The ministry tried to hide information

The internal exchanges of the MTQ, obtained thanks to a request for access to information, show to what extent the department tried to hide information from our Bureau of investigation.


The MTQ's director of public communications acknowledges that her department is unable to follow carbon neutrality approaches.

Photo courtesy, MTQ

The MTQ’s director of public communications acknowledges that her department is unable to follow carbon neutrality approaches.


The Deputy Minister's office is requesting significant changes to the response provided to our Office of Investigation.  Traces of the existence of the Carbon Neutrality Directive are disappearing.

Photo courtesy, MTQ

The Deputy Minister’s office is requesting significant changes to the response provided to our Office of Investigation. Traces of the existence of the Carbon Neutrality Directive are disappearing.

From our first questions to the ministry regarding carbon neutrality, the file is described as “sensitive”.

“Thank you all for taking a last look at it, since it is a sensitive file, and handled by more than one sector. Office [du ministre François Bonnardel] will be advised before contacting the journalist, of course,” wrote MTQ spokesperson Gilles Payer on March 22.

“Let’s make sure the cabinet knows that Quebecor is looking into this,” Assistant Deputy Minister Isabelle Mignault wrote to her assistant and senior adviser, Marianne Pépin, the same day.

Missing references

After an intervention by the deputy minister’s office, any reference to abandoning the reduction of GHGs on “carbon neutral” construction sites disappeared from official responses.

In addition, the MTQ goes out of its way to keep its Carbon Neutrality Directive secret, which establishes the main orientations of the policy and coordinates GHG reduction and offsetting actions.

  • On March 15, we were first told that the directive was not information of a public nature, as the document was not in “its final version”.
  • Then, when we questioned the ministry, we were regarding to be told that “the directive was adopted in 2019. The directive is in force and its application is progressive.”
  • Then the deputy minister’s office demanded a “significant correction.” The fact that the directive exists was then erased in the official response sent to us.

In front of our insistence, the MTQ continued to maintain a vagueness on the existence of this directive, which sowed doubt among certain civil servants.

“For the text of the email, the directive already exists… So I don’t really know”, writes in particular in an internal email the director of communications, Julie Berthold.

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