Canada's patchwork approach to fighting climate change
By Fiona Wagner Bankrate.com
Few global leaders will argue that the need to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions isn't an immediate international challenge.
In Canada, the discussion about whether we should cut emissions
has morphed into one of how to go about doing it. And yet,
years of discussion have resulted in only one definitive action:
National emissions are already 30 percent above our Kyoto commitments
of 6 percent below 1990 levels by 2012.
Most recently, at the G8 Summit in Japan, the federal government stood firm on its insistence that developing
countries like China and India (that are not bound by Kyoto) commit to real targets before Canada will agree to mandatory international
targets for reducing emissions.
Currently, federal legislation calls for a 20 percent
reduction in Canada's total greenhouse gas, or GHG, emissions below
2006 levels by 2020 (equal to about 3 percent higher than 1990 levels
or nine percent higher than our Kyoto commitments) using a plan
that relies on intensity targets (instead of fixed caps) to get
us there.
Early this year, federal Liberal leader Stéphane Dion called for a sliding carbon tax on fossil fuels such as oil,
gas and coal that would be applied to home heating, industry and the production of electricity. The tax is meant to be revenue
neutral, offset by tax breaks.
The federal government dismissed this plan as a "tax grab" that was "foolish and unnecessary," arguing that the
best was to reduce GHG emissions is through regulating large industrial emitters.
The provincial response
Criticism over the lack of an aggressive federal strategy, international pressure and mounting public concern over the environment
has prompted some provinces to take policy matters into their own hands. The result, many experts argue, is a patchwork provincial
regulatory environment instead of a national carbon strategy.
"What the federal government is saying at the moment is, 'We're proposing a scheme, and if a province has a scheme
that matches it or is tougher, then we won't impose federal regulations in that province,'" says Rodney White, author of Carbon
Finance and professor of geography and planning at the University of Toronto. "It's growing from the bottom up, which is a very
messy way to grow."
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