Medicine Hat News

B.C.’s climate change plan aims for changes by 2030 for consumers, industry

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British Columbia has introduced a plan to reach its legislated target to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 with initiative­s like slashing the number of kilometres driven by 25 per cent compared with last year and boosting the carbon tax.

The strategy announced Monday requires that 90 per cent of passenger vehicles sold in 2030 be zero-emission, with all of them required to meet that goal five years later as the province electrifie­s public transit and ferry fleets.

B.C. also set a target of 10,000 public charging stations for electric vehicles by 2030, while aiming to reduce emissions in existing homes and buildings through new space and water heating equipment. As well, all new buildings would not be allowed to emit new climate pollution to the atmosphere at that point.

The government says the plan will result in B.C. meeting its legislated greenhouse gas target of 40 per cent below 2007 levels by 2030.

The latest strategy would increase the price of carbon pollution by meeting or exceeding the 2019 federal benchmark of $170 per tonne starting in 2023 through taxes consumers would pay on fuel and goods as well as by industry that emits carbon dioxide. On April 1, B.C.’s carbon tax rate rose from $40 to $45 per tonne.

Premier John Horgan said the effects of climate change are clear from this summer’s record-setting heat wave, which killed over 800 people in the province, and a wildfire that destroyed the village of Lytton as the temperatur­e rose to nearly 50 C.

“The threat is no longer decades away, it is here with us in everything we do,” he said.

“We need to make sure that we’re regulating the carbon emissions of our largest polluters,” Horgan said. “We need to make sure we’re assisting people in making a transition from how they do business today to how we need to do business in the future.”

Environmen­t Minister George Heyman, who is set to attend the United Nations climate change conference in Glasgow next week, said the province’s newest climate change plan provides initiative­s across all sectors of the economy in order to reduce emissions and that a new law means B.C. must annually report its successes and failures.

The plan, which aims to transition B.C. to a clean-energy economy, includes consultati­on with First Nations as well as a so-called climate solutions council of industry, labour, academics and environmen­tal organizati­ons.

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