Climate remains an urgent task, Oliver says
Resources minister defends prior comments
Canada’s natural resources minister insists the federal government believes climate change is an urgent matter and says his recent comments on climate science will not erode the country’s credibility or chances at U.S. approval for the Keystone XL pipeline.
Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver, under fire Tuesday at a House of Commons committee, also defended the National Energy Board’s controversial new rules for Canadians wanting to participate in public hearings on a proposed Enbridge pipeline reversal and future projects.
Oliver was criticized last week for seemingly casting doubt on climate change science, saying in an interview with La Presse that “people aren’t as worried as they were before about global warming of two degrees.”
“Scientists have recently told us that our fears (on climate change) are exaggerated,” Oliver told the Montreal daily newspaper.
In the interview, Oliver also said he was unaware of a recent warning from the International Energy Agency, a partnership of governments including Canada, that twothirds of the existing known fossil fuel reserves must remain in the ground to prevent average global warming of more than 2 C above pre-industrial levels.
The two-degree threshold is considered to be a dangerous tipping point of irreversible damage to the planet’s ecosystems and economy.
On Tuesday, Oliver said the Conservative government believes climate change is an urgent issue and insisted he expressed that view in last week’s interview.
“I consider this to be an urgent matter,” Oliver told reporters following the grilling at committee.
“I believe and the government believes it’s a serious issue and we’re going to continue to act on that belief going forward.”
The minister does not think his comments will have any impact on the Obama administration’s decision on whether to approve the Keystone XL oilsands pipeline that would run from Alberta to the U.S. Gulf Coast.
Oliver is planning to travel to Washington, D.C. and New York next week to further sell the importance of the pipeline to the United States.
U.S. President Barack Obama is expected to make a final decision on the pipeline sometime in 2013, but it could come as early as the spring or summer.
“We respect that process but we want to make sure they understand what we’re doing and the economic benefits and national security benefits to them,” Oliver said.
But NDP natural resources critic Peter Julian called on Oliver to retract his initial comments on climate change.
The Conservative government is a bit of a laughing stock internationally because of its refusal to take climate change seriously, he said, and “the Keystone project is in jeopardy because of that.”