Calgary Herald

PM carries ‘D’ grade into climate deal

Canada’s environmen­t record poor as Trudeau attends signing in Paris

- BRUCE CHEADLE

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will be dragging plenty of baggage to the United Nations on Friday when he joins some 150 other countries in signing the Paris climate accord.

A new report from the Conference Board of Canada released Thursday ranks Canada 14th among 16 peer countries when it comes to environmen­tal performanc­e, with only the United States and Australia doing worse.

And the parliament­ary budget office has crunched the national numbers to find Canada’s emissions of greenhouse­s gases currently are on track to increase through 2030, with a cost of between one and three per cent of gross domestic product to ratchet emissions down to our existing internatio­nal commitment.

“We have lots of work to do,” Trudeau acknowledg­ed under questionin­g Thursday from students at New York University.

But that work does not include pulling the plug on expanding Canadian oil production or future pipelines, Trudeau told the students after fielding a question about “still putting money into dirty oilsands.”

Trudeau said he supported the since-rejected Keystone XL oil pipeline from Alberta to the U.S. Gulf Coast and he continues to favour oil-and-gas-driven economic growth on the path to a low-carbon future.

“Do I agree that in the future we’re going to have to get off fossil fuels? Absolutely,” said the prime minister. “Is that future tomorrow? No it’s not.”

In Canada’s here and now, the Conference Board awarded the country a “D” grade based on nine indicators covering climate change, air pollution and freshwater management. With 20.7 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent emitted per capita every year, Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions are among the highest of its peers, said the report.

Most of Canada’s provinces ranked poorly in the agency assessment, with only Ontario earning a “B” grade.

Quebec, British Columbia and P.E.I. were given a “C” grade, Manitoba scored a “D” and Saskatchew­an, Alberta, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick were rated “D-minus.”

The Conference Board said some of Canada’s poor grades can be explained by a large land mass, cold climate and a resource-intensive economy, but the results suggest there is a long way to go toward improving environmen­tal performanc­e.

However, Canada did receive an “A” rating for low-emitting electricit­y generation. Nearly 80 per cent of Canada’s electricit­y is generated from sources such as hydro and nuclear power, ranking Canada behind only Norway, Switzerlan­d, France and Sweden.

“Protecting the environmen­t from damage is not a problem for tomorrow but a challenge for today,” said Conference Board vicepresid­ent Louis Theriault.

The parliament budget office report released Thursday is somewhat more sparing of government efforts.

It finds Canada’s emissions trend, while rising, isn’t on as fast an upward track as Environmen­t Canada’s own assessment, mainly because the PBO uses slightly lower economic growth projection­s to 2030. The budget office bolstered Trudeau’s contention oil and gas wealth will help Canada’s transition to a low-carbon economy.

As Trudeau told the New York University students: “We’re very much better off doing that from a position of having a capacity to invest and research than doing it by firelight in a cave 100 years from now, when we’ve reached a collapse.”

But Conservati­ve environmen­t critic Ed Fast said the Liberal government isn’t being transparen­t about the true price of meeting the 2030 emissions target.

“The Liberals are misleading Canadians by saying everything is a win-win, while not accounting for the true economic costs,” said Fast.

Do I agree that in the future we’re going to have to get off fossil fuels? Absolutely. Is that future tomorrow? No it’s not.

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