Calgary Herald

Advocates call out Liberals’ twin pursuits

Pipeline growth at odds with emissions cuts

- BRUCE CHEADLE

OTTAWA • The Liberal government’s twin pursuits of expanded foreign markets for Canadian fossil fuels and global action on climate change are getting some unfavourab­le notice at an internatio­nal climate summit in Morocco.

The newly elected Trudeau government made a big splash at last December’s United Nations-sponsored COP21 in Paris by helping push aggressive global ambition in the battle against a warming planet.

But while negotiatin­g a national plan with the provinces and territorie­s to cut greenhouse gas emissions, the Liberals have also approved a major liquefied natural gas project in British Columbia this fall and signalled their openness to new oil pipeline proposals.

Environmen­tal advocates attending this year’s COP22 in Marrakech, Morocco, issued a release Wednesday calling out Canada’s competing policy priorities.

“It is a serious concern when we see the internatio­nal community not honouring their commitment­s and we are concerned Canada is still pursuing their fossil fuel projects,” Benson Ireri of Christian Aid Africa said in the release. “Developed countries have a moral obligation to honour the Paris Agreement.”

The Philippine­s-based Global Campaign to Demand Climate Justice also waded in, calling on Canada “to do the utmost that it can in domestic emissions reduction, to stop all expansion of fossil fuels, to do an immediate transition to renewable energy and deliver the finance necessary to keep the world from breaching 1.5 (degrees) Celsius,” said spokeswoma­n Lidy Nacpil.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is set to meet his provincial and territoria­l counterpar­ts in early December to finalize a pan-Canadian plan for cutting emissions 30 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030. Trudeau has already laid down a marker with the imposition of an escalating $10-per-tonne floor price on carbon emissions starting in 2018 and topping out at $50 in 2022. But in September, the Liberal cabinet approved Malaysian-based Petronas’s LNG project for northern B.C., which has clearance to pump 4.3 million tonnes of equivalent carbon dioxide annually into the atmosphere for decades.

Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr has also said the Liberal cabinet will make a decision by mid-December on the proposed expansion of Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain oil pipeline from Alberta to Burnaby, B.C.

The Liberals have long been on record supporting TransCanad­a’s Keystone XL pipeline from Alberta to Gulf Coast refineries. The project was blocked by outgoing U.S. President Barack Obama. President-elect Donald Trump favours approval of the line and he’ll have the backing of a Republican­controlled Senate and House of Representa­tives once he takes office in January.

 ?? MOSA’AB ELSHAMY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Activists stage a protest against man-made emissions of carbon dioxide and other global warming gases at the COP22 conference in Marrakech. Environmen­tal advocates attending this year’s event have issued a release denouncing Canada’s competing energy...
MOSA’AB ELSHAMY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Activists stage a protest against man-made emissions of carbon dioxide and other global warming gases at the COP22 conference in Marrakech. Environmen­tal advocates attending this year’s event have issued a release denouncing Canada’s competing energy...

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