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JUNE 2026

This ClimateFast newsletter shares information about the Climate Crisis that may interest our readers, but does not necessarily reflect the views of ClimateFast as an organization, nor the views of its members. If you have an event or resource you would like to share, please send it to newsletter@climatefast.ca.

PLEASE NOTE: This newsletter may be truncated when you receive it; click on 'view entire message' at bottom to see the full document.

 
CLIMATEFAST IN ACTION
 

Clockwise from top left: Toronto Climate Film Festival (tcff.ca) on militarization and the climate; peace activists Tamara Lorincz and Lyn Adamson; City Council Report Cards launch (x2)

 

WARDS PROJECT GEARS UP FOR FALL ELECTION!

On Monday May 25, Wards Project (WP) teams met to discuss their strategy for the 2026 municipal election. The goals of the strategy, based on discussions from their February 7 gathering, were:

  1. To build and/or maintain positive relationships with candidates;

  2. To continue to advocate and/or educate their councillor on climate action; and

  3. To keep climate top of mind.

This will be done through each team interviewing candidates on climate and environment-related questions that also connect to broader election issues (e.g., data centres, equity, provincial government overreach, affordability, etc).  Each WP team will choose and adapt its list of questions to best reflect the pertinent issues in their ward.

 

CITY COUNCILLOR REPORT CARDS  A+ to D

On Saturday May 2, members of the Toronto Climate Voting Records team (a group within ClimateFast) launched report cards scoring members of Toronto City Council with regard to their climate voting record of the past four years. It was a lively event with lots of discussion and questions. The report cards are now in a public resource folder here. To get involved in the project, please email info@climatefast.ca. NOTE: If you missed this event, there is another one being held virtually June 2 @ 6:30 pm. Click here to register.

Find the VR site at votingrecords.climatefast.ca  |     Follow us on Instagram @climatefastaction
 
CALLS TO ACTION
 
Join our Say No to AI Data Centres campaign by joining the virtual town hall meetings! Sign up form can be found here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSesC-1gsI2Z9LFRv2MGNMVWZG5m3T0JOEWEEJxtP8jpZfjB0Q/viewform?usp=dialog
 

You might be wondering, how big is the problem of AI data centres in Ontario? In December 2025, the total amount of electricity demand from data centres hoping to connect to Ontario’s grid was enough to power more than 6.5 million homes.

We need to protect the water in our Great Lakes, and our air quality, from AI data centres, because they demand an enormous amount of water and electricity, which leads to higher bills and taxes. AI data centres are also toxic for the environment because they have on-site fossil fuel generators. These generators release harmful pollutants like nitrogen oxide and carbon monoxide, which are bad for our health. In addition, most, if not all, of the energy generated for the new data centres will be from increasing fossil gas-generated electricity - until at least 2035.

That’s why we need immediate transparency and action on AI data centres: to protect our air, water supply, affordability, and public health.

Check out the data centre map to find noise and emissions levels of data centres near you.

Find resources and helpful information about AI data centres in the Say No to AI data centres public resource folder.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN US!
 

BUILD CANADA'S EAST-WEST GRID WITH RENEWABLES

Canada’s electricity demand will double, or even triple, by 2050. We need a power grid that is fit for the future that provides clean, reliable and affordable electricity for Canadians.

We’re calling on the government to invest $20 billion over five years in new electricity transmission connections between provinces, supports for Indigenous-led projects, and training for workers.

A stronger and more connected grid offers hundreds of thousands of jobs, reduced pollution, real energy security and lower energy bills. We can do this all while upholding Indigenous and workers’ rights and benefitting communities from coast to coast to coast.

DEMAND NATION-BUILDING ACTION HERE!
 

TIME FOR TORONTO TO BAN MORE SINGLE-USE PLASTICS!!

Demand for single-use plastics is destroying our environment, harming our health and exacerbating waste and recycling issues in Toronto. We need to urge our elected representatives to BAN all significant single-use plastics as determined as a first step by City of Toronto consultations.

The city should immediately ban all items it determined to be of high and medium priority in its commissioned report, Technical Memorandum No.1 - Single-use and Takeaway Reduction Strategies:

  • Plastic bags (all weights and types including produce bags) 
  • Cold cups and lids
  • Plastic bottles and caps and plastic liners in metal caps
  • Plastic cutlery
  • Single-use EPS (expanded polystyrene styrofoam), which includes containers, plates, hot/cold cups, trays, cutlery, foam egg cartons, [and more]
  • Plastic food containers
  • Hot cups and lids
  • Black plastic
  • Condiment packets

If the City of Toronto is committed to zero waste and reducing the effects of single-use and takeaway items on our environment, Toronto MUST say NO to destructive single-use plastics NOW, regardless of the actions of the provincial and federal governments.

CLICK HERE TO  TELL THE CITY TO BAN SINGLE-USE PLASTICS NOW!
 

REJECT ALBERTA'S PIPELINE PLOY!

Canada faces a choice: build new fossil fuel pipelines that deepen the climate crisis, damage ecosystems, endanger communities and enrich oil and gas billionaires, or build a truly resilient, people- and nature-centred future powered by renewables.

In November 2025, Prime Minister Carney made a damaging deal with Alberta to fast-track a new diluted bitumen oil pipeline to B.C.’s coast while rolling back key environmental protections. This pipeline would lock Canada into deeper dependence on a declining, high-polluting industry and put North Pacific ecosystems and coastal First Nations at risk from increased tanker traffic and catastrophic oil spills.

There’s still time to stop this pipeline ploy and choose a fossil-fuel free future. Alberta intends to submit its pipeline proposal to the federal government’s Major Projects Office by July 1, 2026.

 CLICK HERE TO STOP THIS MADNESS  BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE!
 
COMING EVENTS
 
How Did Your Councillor Do?

When: Tuesday, June 2; 6:30-7:30 pm

Where: on Zoom

Who: ClimateFast

What else: Check each councillor's climate voting record for 2022-26 - just in time for the fall election! Register here

Heat Pump Party

When: Thursday, June 4; 6:30-8:30 pm

Where: Hosted in a local home; get address when you register

Who: Clean Energy Canada + Goldfinch Energy

What else:  More info and register here

A Walk in the Park

When: Friday, June 5; 10:30 am

Where: Biidaasige Park, Port Lands

Who: CALL's Nature Based Solutions Group

What else: Be led by avid hikers and nature enthusiasts. More info and register here

The Power of Local Action

When: Sunday, June 7; 2-4:30 pm

Where: Fairview Public Library

Who: Hosted by CALL and SCAN!

What else: More info and register here

Yoga and Meditation for Climate Resilience

When: Saturday, June 20; 5-7 pm

Where: The Hummingbird Field Yoga Studio; 2481a Bloor Street W.

Who: Led by Tamara Grossutti:

What else: More info and register here

Heat Pumps + Condos

When: Monday, June 29; 6:30-7:30 pm

Where: on Zoom

Who: Toronto  Home Energy Network

What else: More info and register here

 
 JUNE 1-7, 2026 - ACROSS THE CITY 

Toronto Climate Week (TOCW) transforms the city into a global stage for climate solutions by uniting Canada's climate ecosystem and welcoming international partners to participate in a week of cross-sector collaboration. As a decentralized event platform, TOCW convenes climate innovators, industry leaders, creators, researchers, policymakers, and community groups to catalyze innovation, investment, and public engagement. Browse the events calendar and register for sessions.

 
 
RESOURCES & INFORMATION
 

Hundreds of Rural Albertans Line up to Battle Data Centre Goliath, The Energy Mix, May 29, 2026.

A proposed C$10-billion AI data centre and power plant complex in Olds, Alberta, has sparked more registered intervenors than any utility project in the province’s recent history, according to a veteran regulator.

The Alberta Utilities Commission (AUC) doesn’t officially keep track of the statistics. But Victor Choy, lead application officer at the regulator, told The Energy Mix the project has generated more formal requests to participate in a hearing than any case he’s seen in 18 years on the job. 

Could nature itself hold the solution to climate change?  The Guardian, by Thomas Crowther, May 24, 2026. 

Many people believe the scale of the climate challenge calls for immense technological innovation, geoengineering, or the transformation of our economy. But with these solutions there are often painful trade-offs. Almost every technological or geoengineering fix you can imagine comes at the expense of something else.

There is one set of solutions, however, that present no trade-off at all when they are done right. The restoration of natural habitats like forests is an exception in our climate toolkit because it draws on the same network of connections that allowed life to flourish in the first place.

 
FINAL THOUGHTS
 

Excerpted from "Toronto350 Member Lyn Adamson Honoured With 2026 Pax Christi Toronto Teacher of Peace Award" Toronto350.org blog - May 27, 2026. And  from The Globe and Mail, Agents for change, by Naomi Buck, April 21, 2026.

In early May 2026, Lyn Adamson, a founding member of ClimateFast, received the Pax Christi Award in recognition of her lifetime commitment to promoting peace. Raised in the Society of Friends (Quaker) tradition, in over 50 years of peace advocacy Lyn has been a part of peace actions around the world – in the Middle East, in the US, and in Canada.

Lyn has held the position of National Co-Chair of Canadian Voice of Women for Peace (to sign up for their monthly newsletter go to https://vowpeace.org), Canada’s oldest feminist peace group, since 2009.  In 2012, Lyn co-founded ClimateFast and for four years she co-led ‘Hungry for Climate Justice’,  a multi-day fast on Parliament Hill calling on the government to put a price on carbon, stop subsidizing fossil fuels, and promote renewable energy.  By the end of the fourth summer, in 2015, the movement had gained the signatures of 130 MPs and 17 Senators, and the Liberal platform of 2015 included commitments to ClimateFast’s pledge requests.

Today, Lyn continues her work for climate and peace with passion and energy. She has a lead role in several groups, including, among others, ClimateFast and the Ontario Climate Emergency Campaign.

Recently, in recognition of Earth Day 2026, the Globe and Mail honoured Lyn (and five other seniors) who are working for the planet. Lyn's life is a non-stop deluge of deputations, meetings and demonstrations. Often a spokesperson on local and national  media, Lyn’s energy, focus, and commitment to climate action are truly remarkable and an inspiration to all those she works with.

Congratulations Lyn and thank you for everything you do!

 

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