Boreal forest engulfed in wildfire smoke
Climate emergency

They ran on climate. They're building pipelines.

Canada is on fire. Oil majors are posting record profits. And the Liberal government — the one that begged climate voters for their trust — is fast-tracking new fossil-fuel infrastructure while their own ministers go silent.

Enter your postal code. We'll tell you who your MP is, what they said before, and how to make them answer.

Find your MP · Hold them accountable
30M+ ha
Canadian forest burned over the last 5 wildfire seasons (2020–2024)
$38B+
Public money sunk into Trans Mountain to date
$200B+
Combined 2022–24 profits of Canada's top oil producers
1.5°C
Paris target this government signed — and is now blowing past
Oil pipeline cutting through boreal forest
§ 01 — The Flip-Flop

The Prime Minister wrote the book on net-zero. Now he's building pipelines.

Mark Carney spent a decade as the world's climate-finance banker — UN envoy, GFANZ chair, author of Value(s) — warning that markets that keep funding fossil fuels would cook the planet. Then he became Prime Minister, killed the consumer carbon price, and swung the door open for new oil and gas.

Mark Carney — then

Net zero is the greatest commercial opportunity of our age. Every financial decision must take climate change into account.

UN Special Envoy on Climate Action, 2021
Mark Carney — now

Canada needs to be an energy superpower. We will fast-track projects in the national interest — including new pipelines.

Prime Minister, 2025
Julie Dabrusin — then

I opposed the purchase of the Trans Mountain pipeline.

Public statement, House of Commons record
Julie Dabrusin — now

As Environment Minister, defending the government's broader climate agenda — while not clearly rejecting new pipeline expansion.

Minister of Environment & Climate Change, 2025
Gregor Robertson — then

Kinder Morgan / Trans Mountain would create market failure and an environmental tragedy.

As Mayor of Vancouver
Gregor Robertson — now

Silent as the government advances a new west-coast pipeline plan for the exact coast he vowed to protect.

MP, Vancouver Fraserview—South Burnaby
§ 02 — The Broken Promise

The forests burn. The oil majors get richer. The MPs go quiet.

For a decade, Liberal MPs asked climate-conscious voters to believe they were different. Climate action was urgent. Carbon pricing was non-negotiable. The clean economy was the future. They rode those promises straight into government.

Now, as this government fast-tracks new pipelines while wildfires swallow whole towns and oil executives report their best quarters ever, voters deserve one clear answer: was climate leadership a conviction — or just a campaign message?

This site publishes MPs' own past statements next to their current position — or their silence. It exists because climate voters should not be taken for granted, and because the planet does not grade on a curve.

§ 03 — On Record

What they said. What they're doing now.

View all MPs →
Mark Carney
Mark Carney
Nepean
Prime Minister of Canada
What they said before
Built a global brand as the climate-finance banker — UN Special Envoy on Climate Action, chair of GFANZ, author of Value(s) — arguing that markets must be reshaped around net-zero.UN / GFANZ / Value(s) (2021)
What is happening now

As Prime Minister, killed the consumer carbon price, greenlit a 'nation-building' fast-track for major projects, and openly courted new oil and gas pipeline expansion — the exact fossil-fuel buildout he warned against as a banker.

Why constituents should care

Climate voters were told Carney was the adult in the room on the climate crisis. Instead, forests keep burning, oil companies keep posting record profits, and the man who wrote the book on net-zero is now the one holding the door open for pipelines. If he won't answer for it, no one in cabinet will.

Julie Dabrusin
Julie Dabrusin
Toronto—Danforth
Minister of Environment and Climate Change
What they said before
I opposed the purchase of the Trans Mountain pipeline.Public statement, House of Commons record
What is happening now

As Environment Minister, she is now defending the government's broader climate agenda while not clearly rejecting new pipeline expansion.

Why constituents should care

Toronto—Danforth voters elected someone with strong climate credentials. They deserve clarity on whether that opposition to Trans Mountain still applies as new pipeline expansion advances.

Mark Gerretsen
Mark Gerretsen
Kingston and the Islands
Chief Government Whip
What they said before
Voted against a pro–Trans Mountain opposition motion — one of the few Liberals with a stronger environmental record on the file.House of Commons vote record
What is happening now

Now, as Chief Government Whip, he has not been a visible critic of the government's new pipeline direction — absolute silence on Trans Mountain, with a focus on 'nation-building', despite his firm stance against the pipeline in 2018.

Why constituents should care

Kingston voters should ask whether his earlier pipeline skepticism still stands, or whether caucus discipline now comes first.

François-Philippe Champagne
François-Philippe Champagne
Saint-Maurice—Champlain
Minister of Finance & National Revenue
What they said before
Previously framed climate and economic policy around clean growth, competitiveness, and 'pragmatic' investment.
What is happening now

Now says Canada is striking the 'right balance' between oil and gas expansion and the clean economy.

Why constituents should care

Constituents should ask why climate leadership now includes expanding fossil fuel export infrastructure.

§ 04 — Our Language

We don't say "betrayed." We ask for an answer.

  • Voters deserve an explanation.
  • This raises serious questions.
  • Climate voters should not be taken for granted.
  • Silence is a position.

Your MP works for you. Ask them.

Send an editable letter to your MP asking them to publicly explain their position on new pipeline expansion — and to reconcile it with what they said before.