The Standard (St. Catharines)

Environmen­t watchdog criticizes PC cap-and-trade scrap

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

TORONTO — Ontario’s environmen­tal watchdog criticized the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government on Tuesday for dismantlin­g the province’s cap-andtrade system without putting in an effective climate change program to replace it.

In a report released Tuesday, environmen­tal commission­er Dianne Saxe said the government’s decision could reverse the progress Ontario has made in cutting greenhouse gas emissions over more than a decade.

“Ontario has gutted most of its climate change programs,” she said in a statement. “Most of the cap and trade money was funding energy efficiency programs in Ontario communitie­s — in schools, in public housing, transit and hospitals, for example — that would have reduced (emissions) and saved millions of dollars in energy costs.”

“Dismantlin­g a climate change law that was working is bad for our environmen­t, bad for our health and bad for business,” she said.

The cap-and-trade system was complex and poorly communicat­ed, but was on its way to delivering economic and environmen­tal benefits for the province, the report said.

The cap-and-trade system aims to lower greenhouse gas emissions by putting caps on the amount of pollution companies in certain industries can emit. If they exceed those limits, they must buy allowances at quarterly auctions or from other companies that come in under their limits.

By comparison, the climate change provisions in proposed legislatio­n to scrap cap and trade — known as Bill 4 — are “much too weak,” Saxe said.

“A meaningful climate law needs science-based emissions budgets, a legal obligation to stay within those budgets and credible, transparen­t progress reporting,” she said.

The bill requires the government to set targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions and to publish a climate change plan, but doesn’t entrench either in law.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford made cancelling cap and trade one of his key campaign promises and further vowed to fight Ottawa’s carbon pricing plan for provinces that don’t have their own.

Environmen­t Minister Rod Phillips defended the move on Tuesday, saying a more detailed climate change plan will be presented this fall and the environmen­tal commission­er will be better able to judge then.

“As I said to her directly when we met, respectful­ly, we do not take well to folks telling us that we should not live up to the promises that we made,” he said.

Critics, however, said the report shows the government is unprepared to tackle climate change.The government posted the bill for consultati­on hours later, with the process expected to end on Oct. 11. The group is proceeding with the lawsuit.

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