The Manila Times

‘West should step up climate commitment’

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OTTAWA: President Joe Biden must show he is serious and committed about US reengageme­nt on climate change, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in an interview with Agence France-Presse ahead of a virtual climate summit opening this week.

Highlighti­ng Washington’s return investment­s, for example, in to the front lines of the solar power, electric vehicles and fight against man-made climate battery technologi­es. change, the two-day summit startThe West, he said, must step up ing Thursday will be the first big or risk falling behind. event on the environmen­t of his “I know that Canada and developed presidency, and comes ahead of countries like us around two other major climate meetings the world are very interested in later in the year. ensuring that we’re competing

“The commitment that the US with China successful­ly on new has shown after a few years away technologi­es,” Trudeau said. from the climate table is something “I’m not going to let China take that people will be looking all the innovation­s and all the to ensure that it is serious, that it economic growth that’s going to is committed,” Trudeau told AFP. come from going greener,” he said.

“There’s no question that we “There are lots of areas in which need a country of the scale of we disagree with China, but if we the United States to be part of can all create a similar momentum the solution, not part of the on an issue that touches every problem, if we’re going to make corner of this planet, then I think it as a planet,” he said. that’s a good thing.”

Another big polluter, China, was invited to the summit, but hasn’t formally accepted yet.

China, now the world’s secondlarg­est economy, and the West have grown increasing at odds over a wide array of issues, from trade and intellectu­al property to Beijing’s crackdown on Hong

Kong and Xinjiang.

On Friday, as Trudeau was speaking to AFP, US climate envoy

John Kerry visited China, signaling hopes the two sides could work together on climate.

Trudeau acknowledg­ed that

China has shown it is “taking seriously the need to reduce their pollution,” noting its massive

A plan for the future

On Monday, Trudeau’s deputy Chrystia Freeland is to deliver his Liberal government’s first budget in two years, with significan­t funding expected for clean energy projects to anchor Canada’s economic recovery from last year’s pandemic recession.

“Certainly, as we have said for a long time, you can’t have a plan for the future of the economy without having a plan for the environmen­t and for fighting climate change,” Trudeau said.

He said the Covid-19 pandemic has changed how people do business and live their lives, “has led us to think differentl­y about telework or travel.”

It has also shown, he said, “to what point people can change their behavior, adjust (in) a crisis.”

“If we were able to do it for the pandemic crisis, we will obviously have to know that we are able to do it for this environmen­tal crisis,” he suggested.

Trudeau didn’t point to specific lessons to be drawn from the pandemic and applied to the climate problem but said “to be ambitious for a better future, everyone agrees these days on that.”

It’s a message he’s shared with other world leaders whom he said have been “very interested in the fact that not only had I brought in a carbon tax, a price on pollution, but I won elections with that at the heart of our campaign.”

Trudeau’s Liberals, campaignin­g on strong climate actions, went from third ranked party in parliament to winning a majority in the 2015 general election.

Four years later, his party, tainted by scandals, was returned to office with a minority. But with another election looming in the coming months, Trudeau looks set to regain his majority, according to polls, vowing even stronger climate measures.

Canada pledged under the Paris Agreement to the cut its CO2 emission by 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.

Last December, Trudeau announced an accelerate­d incrementa­l hike of his country’s carbon tax on fossil fuels from Can$50 per tonne in 2022 to Can$170 per tonne by 2030 — enough, according to officials, to increase the price of gasoline by nearly 28 cents a liter.

Each country, ‘its own context’

The European Union is considerin­g bringing in a carbon levy while the United States has so far resisted imposing one.

On Friday, Trudeau echoed economists’ view that a marketbase­d mechanism such as carbon pricing “is a very effective way to reduce emissions.”

“When there will be elections, (Canada’s carbon tax) will be part of our ambitious plan,” he said, “but obviously it does not take just that, it also takes investment­s in new technologi­es, it takes support for households to be able to pay for this transition.”

“I think the important thing it is to recognize that each country has its own challenges, has its own context,” he said. “For us, the price on pollution was absolutely the right thing to do. For other countries it may be more regulation­s or more investment.”

He said “the important thing is that everyone does their part in an ambitious way, not only to protect the planet but to ensure that they have the benefits of this shift that we are in the process of making as a society, as a civilizati­on.”

“I look forward,” he concluded, “to continuing to have conversati­ons with President Biden, with European leaders and those around the world to stress that the more ambitious you can be in putting a price on pollution, the better we will be able to generate growth and wealth and jobs for our citizens.”

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