Penticton Herald

B.C. budget gets mixed reviews on environmen­t

- By ROCHELLE BAKER

B.C.’s budget viewed through a climate lens got mixed reviews from the province’s environmen­tal and conservati­on sector following its release Tuesday.

The province got kudos for bolstering funding for parks and trails for active transporta­tion initiative­s to get people out of their cars and on bikes and walking paths. But the budget was panned by those hoping to see a wholesale commitment to the protection of oldgrowth or urgent, large-scale reductions of greenhouse gas emissions.

The NDP budget buffered some immediate impacts from the rising cost of living, but it failed to make transforma­tive investment­s to lay solid foundation­s for a fair, affordable, sustainabl­e future, the B.C. Green Party said.

“Premier David Eby seems to be sprinkling money around to a lot of existing programs and spending big on affordabil­ity cheques, but we’re not going to solve the underlying issues that are driving big problems,” said Sonia Furstenau, B.C. Greens leader and the MLA for Cowichan Valley.

It was disappoint­ing there were no big investment­s in community health centres or social services and supports, public transit, climate or the environmen­t or preventati­ve health care, Furstenau said.

This year’s budget offered “next to nothing” in the way of expanding B.C. Transit and no spending to build intra-regional transit to connect smaller, rural communitie­s outside the Lower Mainland or beyond Greater Victoria on Vancouver Island, Furstenau said.

The province’s budget rhetoric offered very little on a vision for public transit, said transporta­tion planning consultant Eric Doherty.

Capital investment for B.C. Transit in things like equipment, vehicles and infrastruc­ture has doubled, going from $110 million to $232 million. And the fiscal plan suggests that spending will double again to $500 million by 2025-26, but it’s still unclear how and where that money will be spent in the short and long terms.

The province has also committed $100 million to grow active transporta­tion – where people walk, ride or roll rather than drive in their community – over the next three years.

It’s a welcome small step, said Doherty, also a member of the Better Transit Alliance of Greater Victoria.

“But this is pocket change compared to the billions budgeted for highway expansion in urban areas,” he said.

The budget reflected some important conservati­on commitment­s that will help the province reach its conservati­on goal to protect 30 per cent of B.C. lands and waters by 2030, according to the Canadian Parks and Wilderness SocietyBri­tish Columbia (CPAWS-B.C.).

The new budget allocates $100 million over three years for B.C. Parks, recreation sites and trails.

“A significan­t increase to the B.C. Parks and recreation budget will support beloved trails and campsites, and increase accessibil­ity for people to connect with the lands and waters that make B.C. unique,” said Tori Ball, CPAWSB.C.’s terrestria­l conservati­on manager. However, the budget doesn’t invest in the province’s commitment­s to defer the logging of 2.6 million hectares of old-growth, safeguard ancient ecosystems and meet the recommenda­tions of the Old-Growth Strategic Review, according to the Wilderness Committee.

There’s no new funding beyond what’s already been announced for land use planning, said Terrance Coste, its national campaign director.

“If Premier David Eby and the B.C. NDP are serious about keeping their promises to safeguard atrisk old-growth forests and double the amount of protected areas in the province in the next seven years, they need to spend money to make it happen,” Coste said.

“We were looking for hundreds of millions of dollars in the years ahead to help enable conservati­on in old-growth forests and other important ecosystems and support solutions like Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas.”

It’s also alarming the budget is projecting a rise in the production of liquefied natural gas (LNG) despite a 13 per cent average annual drop in gas royalties, Coste noted.

“Developing a fracked gas industry in B.C. has never made sense from a climate perspectiv­e, and it’s an increasing­ly bad economic deal for the province, as well.”

The budget includes $40 million to advance the transition to zeroemissi­on vehicles through the province’s electric commercial vehicle pilot program to help the private and public sector fleets make the switch.

But the funding for the Clean B.C. pilot program was wholly inadequate given the scale of the challenge, said Sven Biggs, Canadian oil and gas program director for Stand.earth.

“We should be making generation­al investment­s to rapidly scale up renewable energy systems, build climate-resilient housing, expand public transporta­tion, create good jobs in sustainabl­e industries but instead, we’re continuing to spend billions on handouts for extremely profitable oil and gas companies.”

B.C.’s carbon tax will increase $15 per tonne annually until it hits $170 in 2030 as a means to encourage industry to cut emissions. But to ensure affordabil­ity for residents, rebates and climate action tax credits will be expanded, with a four-person family receiving a maximum of $900 a year, up from $500.

The budget did heavily invest in climate adaptation, with $1.1 billion over the next three years to build climate-resilient communitie­s and to help areas still affected by climate disasters such as B.C.’s recent floods and fires.

Although the bulk of those funds, $750 million, had already been committed in 2022, an additional $300 million in capital funding is dedicated to provincial infrastruc­ture damaged by climate emergencie­s.

B.C. has also created a new Ministry of Emergency Manage ment and Climate Readiness to allow the province to better respond to emergencie­s and help communitie­s plan and prepare for the climate crisis – with $85 million in the budget to boost emergency management and risk assessment­s.

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