The federal government is looking to train 2,000 more people to do energy audits as it tries to get a new green home renovation program off the ground.
Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’Regan says the government will provide up to $10 million in contracts to recruit, train and mentor 2,000 energy advisers to advise people how to cut their home energy use.
The government is issuing a call for proposals Monday to anyone wanting to take on the job of training and recruiting the new workers.
They will then help provide the energy audits and advice needed for the Canada Greener Homes Grant to work.
The program unveiled last fall, but not yet launched, is to provide up to $5,000 grants to homeowners to make upgrades that curb their energy use, but requires a registered energy adviser to do a pre-renovation assessment and then a post-renovation evaluation.
It’s just a fraction of the $40,000 interest-free loans for home energy retrofits Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised during the 2019 federal election.
The recent federal budget promised $4.4 billion over the next five years to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, which will administer those $40,000 loans.
O’Regan would offer no details Monday on how the loans and grants will be different, saying Canadians should stay tuned because he didn’t want to “scoop” himself.
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