Maclean's

The Editorial

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Back in 1988, Maclean’s reported on the growing alarm among scientists over the greenhouse effect, a theory that emissions from industrial activity were warming the climate. With the benefit of hindsight, the article is laden with darkly comedic understate­ment. One expert notes dryly: “Something appears to be happening here that is unnatural.” Experts quoted in the piece caution against inaction, the consequenc­e being the flooding of coastal cities by 2030. It ends with a warning from climate scientist Henry Hengeveld: “The risks are great enough that we cannot wait to act.”

And yet, here we are. Both Liberal prime minister Jean Chrétien and Conservati­ve Stephen Harper agreed to internatio­nal emission-reduction targets and then did little to implement them. Justin Trudeau imposed a national carbon tax, but it’s one-half of what’s needed to do the job, according to the Parliament­ary Budget Office.

If there’s any good news, it’s that Canadians understand the pending crisis. In late June, pollster Nik Nanos said the environmen­t had been the top issue of national concern for four weeks in a row—the first time that had happened in 15 years of his work. A poll conducted for the CBC found 38 per cent of Canadians believe “our survival depends” on addressing climate change, while three-quarters were willing to make changes to their lives to help combat global warming.

But the change Canadians favour is more incrementa­l than radical. Support for carbon pricing is modest. The CBC poll suggested 43 per cent of Canadians support the current carbon tax; Nanos put it at 38 per cent. It’s clear that both the Conservati­ves and Liberals look at these numbers and see a reason for caution. But the science offers none: they are fiddling while the world burns. As Elizabeth May told Paul Wells in a recent Maclean’s

Live interview: “It’s bad luck for the current generation of politician­s because the time for procrastin­ation has run out.”

It’s time that Canadians demand results from their political leaders. Which is why we’ve published this climate change issue in advance of the federal election. The articles contained within offer a comprehens­ive look at where Canada currently stands, what could be done to address the issue and what the consequenc­es might be if this country continues with half measures. We’re not advocating for one fix over another, but there are real solutions to consider.

Maclean’s is making its own commitment to contribute to this important conversati­on. We’ve joined Covering Climate Now, an internatio­nal effort to co-operate on and improve coverage of the issue. Led by the Columbia

Journalism Review and The Nation, the project will involve a week of reporting leading into a United Nations summit in the fall. As veteran newsman Bill Moyers told a conference that launched this initiative in April: “There’s no future in naysaying.”

Maclean’s has been racking up awards and nomination­s this year, including four golds at the Canadian Magazine Awards. Michael Friscolant­i, Jason Markusoff and Kyle Edwards won in the One of a Kind Storytelli­ng category for their oral history of the Humboldt Broncos bus crash; our First World War commemorat­ive edition won Best Editorial Package; our pay equity edition took the Cover Grand Prix; and Editorin-Chief Alison Uncles won the Editor Grand Prix. Assistant Editor Kyle Edwards won the Emerging Indigenous Journalist Award from the Canadian Associatio­n of Journalist­s and Journalist­s for Human Rights. Senior Writer Anne Kingston was shortliste­d for the Michele Landsberg Award, presented by the Canadian Journalism Foundation in associatio­n with the Canadian Women’s Foundation, for coverage around women’s equality issues. Associate Editor Prajakta Dhopade won a Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing award for the Best Audio or Visual Storytelli­ng category. And finally, Maclean’s won gold at the Digital Publishing Awards for general excellence in an online publicatio­n.

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