Ottawa Citizen

CANADA SPENT $1.4M GOING TO COP28: DOCS

AT LEAST 140 FEDERAL EMPLOYEES FLEW TO CLIMATE CONFERENCE IN DUBAI

- BRYAN PASSIFIUME

• Participat­ing in a UN climate change conference last year cost Canada nearly $1.4 million, according to newly released documents.

The 28th United Nations climate change conference, also known as COP28, took place in Dubai from Nov. 30 until Dec. 12.

Canada's delegation consisted of 633 attendees, according to answers contained within an order paper question submitted by Conservati­ve MP Andrew Scheer.

They included federal and provincial politician­s, Indigenous and environmen­tal groups, and executives from both government agencies and private corporatio­ns.

The numbers contained in the documents are not final, as invoices and claims are still being processed.

The breakdown of the $1,353,307.09 Canada spent to attend COP28 is as follows: Transporta­tion: $658,611.50 Accommodat­ions in 21 Dubai hotels: $449,597.11

Meals and incidental­s: $241,106.02

Hospitalit­y: $3,992.56

While the response provided lists of core and pavilion delegation members, the government did not disclose how many people attended the conference on the taxpayer's dime.

“The federal government covered the costs of federal employees, four Indigenous representa­tives, six youth delegates, six civil society representa­tives, six Parliament­arians, one Net-zero Advisory Board member, five non-public servant Canada pavilion support staff, and 22 Canada pavilion participan­ts belonging to underrepre­sented groups,” the response said, adding that funding was provided for nine representa­tives from national Indigenous organizati­ons to attend.

“Delegates other than those outlined above were responsibl­e for their own travel expenses.”

The response didn't specify how many federal employees attended the conference, but a review of Canada's delegate lists suggests around 140 people.

Among them were Environmen­t Minister Steven Guilbeault; four MPS; three senators; scores of deputy ministers and executives from a variety of government agencies and department­s including Environmen­t Canada, Transport Canada, Fisheries and Oceans, Global Affairs Canada and the Canadian Space Agency; ministeria­l staffers; and ambassador­s and diplomatic staff.

Also attending the conference was Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, who brought an entourage of 18 staffers, deputy ministers and protection detail.

Inquiries seeking exact numbers of federal employees who attended COP28 were made with Environmen­t Canada.

The order paper response provided few details on the government's carbon footprint of their COP28 delegation, mentioning that emissions data is maintained through the government's centralize­d travel booking service and that such informatio­n is not tracked in any government database.

“This data is not disaggrega­ted by individual and does not includes ministeria­l travel, which is not booked through the centralize­d system,” the response said, adding that Environmen­t Canada purchases carbon offset credits in bulk rather than specifical­ly for each instance of travel.

A total of 159 hotel rooms were booked across 21 properties, with most staying at the Delta Hotels by Marriott in Dubai's Investment Park, just across the highway from the COP28 venues at Dubai's Expo City neighbourh­ood.

A total of 171 nights were booked across 40 rooms at that hotel, totalling $204,022.03.

Fifty-five rooms were also booked for 15 nights at the nearby Premier Inn, racking up a $195,462.12 bill.

The balance of the hotels largely saw just a handful of booked rooms, with 13 at the Amwaj Rotana Jumeirah Beach Hotel, and 10 at the Pullman Dubai Jumeirah Lakes Towers.

While most rooms ranged from $200 to $400 per night, the most expensive room booked was a single night at the Tryp by Windham Dubai, costing $1,821.90.

However, an Environmen­t Canada spokespers­on confirmed that number was a clerical error, and that the charge was for a seven-night stay at the hotel, not a single night.

Franco Terrazzano, federal director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, questioned the environmen­tal stewardshi­p of spending over a million dollars to facilitate 633 people boarding flights to Dubai.

“Nothing screams fighting climate change like flying around the world, burning through jet fuel and taxpayers' cash,” he told the National Post.

“This fits into a bigger problem with this government where politician­s and bureaucrat­s are constantly jetting off to fancy conference­s and sticking struggling taxpayers with the big bill.”

Canada's COP28 bill came in a little under what Rideau Hall spent to send Governor General Mary Simon and 29 passengers for a week-long visit to Dubai and the Middle East in 2022 aboard a government VIP aircraft.

Nearly $100,000 of that trip's $1.3 million price tag went toward in-flight catering costs, with passengers enjoying beef Wellington, carpaccio and over $500 for a redacted quantity of lemons and limes.

 ?? JEWEL SAMAD/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Canada spent $1.4 million to send a delegation to the COP28 climate conference in Dubai in November, which included $658,611 for transporta­tion, $449,597 for hotels, $241,106 for meals and incidental­s, and $3,992 for hospitalit­y.
JEWEL SAMAD/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Canada spent $1.4 million to send a delegation to the COP28 climate conference in Dubai in November, which included $658,611 for transporta­tion, $449,597 for hotels, $241,106 for meals and incidental­s, and $3,992 for hospitalit­y.

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