The Standard (St. Catharines)

Canada will meet climate targets despite emissions gap

Catherine McKenna says though there is time to reach the goal, country must do more

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON — Federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna says Canada is committed to meeting its climate change targets despite a growing gap between promises and emissions projection­s.

“We’re absolutely committed to meeting our target,” McKenna, who was in Edmonton this week for an internatio­nal conference on cities and climate change, told The Canadian Press. “We’re all in.”

In 2015, Canada’s total greenhouse gas emissions were 722 megatonnes annually of carbon dioxide equivalent. The Paris climate accord commits the country to reducing that total to 517 megatonnes by 2030.

In December, the government delivered a report to the United Nations outlining progress on reaching that target. The report acknowledg­ed that both current and planned policies are likely to leave the country 66 megatonnes short of its target.

That figure is 50 per cent higher than a similar report made to the UN 18 months ago.

“It’s a good-news, bad-news story,” said McKenna.

“Our economy is growing and our projection­s are based on our economic growth. It just means that we need to be doing more. There’s huge opportunit­ies that we haven’t built into our target.”

McKenna said Canada has plenty of time to catch up to where it’s supposed to be.

“It’s a 2030 target,” she said. “We’ve said this is a transition and you don’t transition overnight.”

Billions of dollars marked for public transporta­tion in the last federal budgets will help, she said.

New technologi­es for carbonheav­y industries, such as cement manufactur­ing, are expected to cut greenhouse gas emissions and aren’t yet figured into the projection. The federal government is also counting on reforestat­ion to reduce Canada’s carbon footprint because growing trees pull carbon out of the atmosphere and store it in forests.

“We need to figure out the opportunit­ies. We know that they’re huge.”

Environmen­t Canada officials have attributed the 22-megatonne increase between the two UN reports to a growing population and increased output from Canada’s oil and gas industry. The proposed Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion, approved by the federal Liberals to take hydrocarbo­ns from Alberta’s oilsands to the British Columbia coast, is widely expected to increase associated emissions.

McKenna said that has been taken into account.

“The approval of (the Kinder Morgan pipeline) was made in the context of our climate plan,” she said.

The minister pointed out that Alberta has capped emissions from the oilsands and implemente­d a carbon tax. Ottawa will bring in its own climate levy, she said.

“We’re doing a lot. There’s coherence across the board.”

Keith Stewart, climate campaigner for Greenpeace, said McKenna’s reassuranc­e ignores the facts.

“The math simply doesn’t add up,” he said.

“There’s still a big gap between what we’ve promised to do and what we are actually doing, and building new pipelines makes that gap bigger. If Canada really is ‘all in’ on climate action, then we have to stop building new fossil fuel megaprojec­ts and invest in green energy solutions instead.”

An Environmen­t Canada official pointed out that a 22-megatonne change in the overall context of Canada’s total emissions could simply be the result of annual changes in the economy or in how things are measured.

As well, cities and provinces haven’t yet outlined their plans for investment­s in transit or reforestat­ion clearly enough for Ottawa to estimate their greenhouse gas impacts, the official said.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG
THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Minister of Environmen­t and Climate Change Catherine McKenna has assured the public that Canada will meet the Paris climate accord goal of reducing emissions by 2030, despite a recent report that indicates the country will fall short of the target.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS Minister of Environmen­t and Climate Change Catherine McKenna has assured the public that Canada will meet the Paris climate accord goal of reducing emissions by 2030, despite a recent report that indicates the country will fall short of the target.

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