Ottawa Citizen

Budget to help expand protected lands, waters

Morneau urged to spend $1.4B over next 3 years

- Andy BlAtchford

OTTAWA • The federal government appears poised to commit what some believe could be a significan­t amount of cash in next week’s budget to protect more of Canada’s lands, inland waters and oceans.

Groups pushing Canada to fulfil its internatio­nal vows to safeguard more of its ecosystems by 2020 say signals from Ottawa suggest this will be the year the government invests big in protected areas.

It remains to seen how far the Liberal government will go to meet its targets under the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity — but the clock is ticking.

The agreement, reached in 2010, says Canada must protect at least 17 per cent of its terrestria­l areas, including inland waters, as well as at least 10 per cent of its oceans by 2020.

Today, Canada’s protected space covers nearly eight per cent of its marine ecosystems and just over 10 per cent of terrestria­l areas.

To meet the UN goals, a coalition of 19 environmen­tal and conservati­on organizati­ons has called on the federal government to use the budget to invest $1.3 billion over the next three years. After that, the Green Budget Coalition wants Ottawa to commit another $450 million per year.

From their interactio­ns with federal officials, members of the group say momentum has been building for months inside government.

“I would be very surprised if there wasn’t some money — and even a significan­t amount of money — for protected areas because that feels increasing­ly like the direction the government has been going,” said Eric Hebert-Daly, national executive director of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society.

“The drive to the 2020 targets is really taking shape in a way that we had been hoping for over the last number of years and the seriousnes­s with which the government seems to be taking it is going well.”

If Canada hopes to meet the 2020 deadline, time is of the essence. Hebert-Daly said there’s little chance of meeting the goal unless Ottawa puts money on the table this year.

The push is only part of the growing pressure on Finance Minister Bill Morneau, who’s faced public demands from within his own party to help protect ecosystems in next Tuesday’s budget.

Last month, Liberal backbenche­r William Amos led a campaign that saw 116 MPs and senators from all major political parties sign a letter to Morneau. It urged him to invest at least $1.4 billion over the next three years to help the country meet its UN commitment on protected areas.

The issue of protected spaces has been an all-party concern in other instances as well.

Last March, a parliament­ary committee report, which received unanimous support, made 36 recommenda­tions on how the government could rapidly expand Canada’s protected spaces. The paper said there was a need for adequate funding to create and manage protected areas.

The Liberals vowed to follow through on the UN commitment­s during the 2015 election campaign and Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna’s mandate letter has instructed her to work with the fisheries minister and the Canadian Coast Guard to protect 10 per cent of the country’s marine and coastal areas by 2020.

John Lounds, president and CEO of the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada, said the Trudeau government has been “very keen” on making sure Canada is living up to its internatio­nal obligation­s.

“I’ve been encouraged by all the discussion­s I’ve been having and I think 2018 is the year,” said Lounds, who noted Canada boasts 20 per cent of the world’s freshwater and forests as well as up to 25 per cent of the planet’s wetlands.

“We’ve got an awful lot that we’re custodians of and it’s important that Canada step up and lead the way.”

 ?? MIKE DEMBECK, THE NATURE CONSERVANC­Y OF CANADA / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A section of ecological­ly significan­t shoreline in northeaste­rn New Brunswick.
MIKE DEMBECK, THE NATURE CONSERVANC­Y OF CANADA / THE CANADIAN PRESS A section of ecological­ly significan­t shoreline in northeaste­rn New Brunswick.

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