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How Canada can step up its game on climate change

#17 of 57 articles from the Special Report: Letters to the Editor
Environment Minister Catherine McKenna listens to Stanley Kimaren Riamit, from the Tebtebba foundation in Kenya, as she hosted an event in Germany on Nov. 15, 2017 to showcase Indigenous leadership at the UN climate change talks. Photo by Mike De Souza

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Canada boasted about its leadership at the annual United Nations climate conference after spearheading the Canada-UK Powering Past Coal Alliance. The alliance includes more than 25 countries and sub-national governments pledging to phase out coal by 2030.

But just how proud does the Canadian government actually deserve to be of its climate leadership?

This is a question that we, as youth delegates to the conference hosted by the Fiji presidency in Bonn, Germany, were asking.

The Paris Agreement and where Canada fits in

In October 2016, Canada ratified the Paris Agreement, an unprecedented consensus achieved among 197 countries. The accord aims to limit the rise in average global temperatures to a maximum of 2 degree Celsius above pre-industrial levels, while striving to stay closer to 1.5.

In order to ratify, each country needs pledge a ‘Nationally Determined Contribution’ to reaching the overarching goal of reducing carbon emissions to slow global warming to within the targets.

The Emissions Gap Report released this fall by UN Environment found that the world’s pledged commitments so far cover only a third of what is necessary to stay below the 2°C temperature increase deemed safe for humanity.

As for Canada, its pledge calls for a 30 per cent reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from 2005 levels by 2030, and outlines how Canada will get there. It commits $2.65 billion over five years for climate financing.

How ambitious is Canada’s pledge?

In short, this simply is not ambitious enough.

Canada’s commitments do not represent Canada’s fair share of greenhouse gas emissions reductions and financial contributions for adaptation.

Climate Action Network Canada recommends increasing Canada’s mitigation target to a 50-per-cent reduction by 2050 increasing the financial contribution to $4 billion annually.

What’s more, the Canadian Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development recently released a report concluding that “Environment and Climate Change Canada... did not make progress toward meeting Canada’s commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

This report reflects on the backtracking climate policy of the former Harper government, sending a clear message to the current Trudeau government to act swiftly, coherently, and with utmost ambition to meet its commitments.

Canada’s pledge includes a reduction of a whopping 44 megatonnes of carbon that sit outside existing plans through regulations and the Pan-Canadian Framework on Clean Growth and Climate Change. As of yet, there is no concrete plan for how Canada will bridge the gap to our existing target, let alone improve the target.

On top of this, Canada’s climate change strategy — as well as the Paris agreement itself — says nothing explicit about reducing the production of fossil fuels like oil and gas. In 2016, Canada was the world’s fifth largest producer of oil.

By avoiding this elephant in the room, Canada is ignoring the reality that it does not make sense to expand the production of oil if we are going to phase out fossil fuels by 2050 — a necessary action to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement. Canada’s continued support of projects like the Keystone XL and TransMountain pipeline expansion also contradicts its commitment to respect the rights of Indigenous communities.

The gap between Canada’s international and domestic climate presence

Though its targets on domestic climate action reflect insufficient climate ambition, Canada showed some leadership in advancing negotiations here at COP 23. The discrepancy between Canada’s climate actions in the domestic and international spheres makes it challenging to clearly gauge Canada’s progress.

Environment Minister Catherine McKenna is working hard to make progress on gender and Indigenous issues. But the reality remains: at the end of the day, Canada will still emit much more carbon than is safe.

Canada has relied on fossil fuels and resources from unsurrendered Indigenous land in its development as a wealthy nation. As such, Canada has a historical and continued obligation to make serious commitments to preventing catastrophic climate change, while also contributing substantial financial resources to the countries whose citizens will suffer most from the increasing frequency and severity of extreme weather events.

Youth understand this moral imperative deeply, because we will have to bear the brunt of climate change’s negative impacts.

Move beyond weak commitments from Harper era

So, in order for Canada to become the climate leader it claims to be, we have a few suggestions. Canada should:

  1. Increase targets for its pledge to the Paris Agreement, and get concrete about how it will get there. Canada should increase the ambition of its pledge beyond its current targets, and act on those targets before 2020. There is an imperative to move quickly and far beyond the weak existing commitments that were set in the Harper era.
  2. Include an explicit plan for a Just Transition in its pledge. Just Transition refers to a framework in which policies would ensure job safety, employment training, and other social insurances to ease the plight of individuals and communities during the transition to a low-carbon economy. Just Transition is about approaching the path to the Paris Agreement equitably for workers and communities, with particular attention to Indigenous peoples, who are disproportionately affected by the fossil fuel industry. Currently Canada does not address the idea of Just Transition in its pledge. We implore Canada to integrate a Just Transition plan into its pledge to the Paris agreement, as recommended by Climate Action Network Canada.
  3. Outline a plan for phasing out fossil fuels in its pledge, and encourage other Parties to do the same. In the Paris Agreement, the words “fossil fuel”, “oil”, and “gas” are not once mentioned. The Paris Agreement stipulates that “emissions” need to be reduced, covering the demand side of fossil fuels, but the supply side is quite simply ignored. Manipulating demand at this rate alone won’t decrease emissions fast enough for the world to stay within 1.5 or 2 degree goals of the Paris Agreement. That’s why supply-side policies on phasing out fossil fuels need to come into force as part of the solution.

An opportunity for climate leadership

Given the White House’s step back from the sphere of climate action, there is an opportunity for Canada to step up as a climate leader. Canada has has already taken initiative to spearhead the Powering Past Coal Alliance and create multilateral partnerships with countries, provinces, states, cities, and non-state actors. But true climate leadership goes beyond political signals and ambitious talk; Canada must show its commitment to climate justice through tangible plans to reduce emissions drastically at home. The lives of the world’s most vulnerable, and our future as youth, depend on it.

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