Climate change could be NAFTA stumbling block
OTTAWA A frank report on climate change in America leaked to the New York Times a week before the U.S. sits down to begin renegotiating NAFTA may give some weight to Canada’s push to get climate change mitigation included as part of the new continental trade deal.
But that, of course, would require U.S. President Donald Trump to buy into even some of what the report says, which, in short, is that climate change is real, caused by people and that some extreme weather events can now be attributed to the warming planet.
The special report on climate change by scientists at 13 U.S. federal agencies hasn’t been approved yet by the White House and was leaked by scientists who fear Trump will refuse to release it because it counters his belief that climate change is a “hoax.”
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said last week Canada wants climate change, reduced emissions and efforts to shift to a low-carbon economy written into the new NAFTA
Canada, the U.S. and Mexico are to start renegotiating the 23year-old trade deal on Aug. 16.
“We are certainly looking for a better level playing field across North America on environmental protections,” Trudeau said.
However with Trump withdrawing the U.S. from the Paris climate change agreement and pledging to return the U.S. coal industry to its glory days, the White House and the Canadian government are far apart on many environmental issues.
Even getting the words “climate change” into the agree- ment could be a struggle.
A government official speaking on background said last week that, on the environment side, Canada will be looking to the free trade agreement recently signed with Europe, known as the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, or CETA, as a template.
Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland has referred to CETA as the gold standard of trade agreements when it comes to the environment and said she wants to push CETA’s environment chapter with the U.S. and Mexico on NAFTA.
However, several trade experts say the U.S. is going to be pushing for the environment chapter in NAFTA to be more closely aligned with the now-defunct Trans Pacific Partnership or TPP. One key difference? CETA mentions climate change. TPP does not.
“CETA is more relevant to Canada and the TPP is more relevant to the United States,” said Peter Clark, an international trade expert and president of the Ottawa firm Grey, Clark, Shih and Associates.
The new U.S. climate report puts new weight behind Canada’s contention that climate change is real and is caused by people, two things the Trump White House disputes.
The report says the earth has already warmed almost a full degree in the last 150 years, triggering numerous changes to the earth’s climate, pointing to “thousands of studies conducted by tens of thousands of scientists” as evidence of changes in temperature of the surface, atmosphere and oceans, melting glaciers, shrinking sea ice and rising sea levels.