The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Canada opens public consultati­ons on climate strategy

- NIA WILLIAMS REUTERS

Canada launched the public consultati­on phase of a national climate adaptation strategy on Monday, aimed at developing its first-ever framework to help cope with increasing natural disasters and other severe impacts from global warming.

During the three-month consultati­on period Canadians are being asked for input on how communitie­s and businesses should prepare for climate-related disasters like wildfires, rising sea levels and melting permafrost.

The climate in Canada is warming twice as fast as the global average, and the consultati­on comes as recent flooding displaces communitie­s in Manitoba and the Northwest Territorie­s.

“No corner of Canada is untouched, the costs of climate change are mounting in all parts of the country,” Federal Environmen­t Minister Steven Guilbeault told a news conference, adding that in the last few years the impacts of climate change had cost the country C$30 billion ($23.28 billion).

“An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,” he said.

Canada is aiming to cut climate-warming carbon emissions to net-zero by 2050. Guilbeault said the country needs to work simultaneo­usly on reducing carbon pollution and preparing for the impacts of climate change as temperatur­es rise.

Recent extreme weather events include a series of atmospheri­c rivers that flooded British Columbia in November and a record-breaking “heat dome” in western Canada last summer that was followed by destructiv­e wildfires.

Ottawa plans to release the final adaptation strategy by fall 2022. It will focus on long-term and short-term goals for Canada’s economy, infrastruc­ture, disaster resilience, natural environmen­t and the health and well-being of Canadians.

Short-term priorities include enhancing food security, updating building codes and expanding Canada’s network of trained responders for when natural disasters strike.

Analysts at the Canadian Climate Institute think tank said Canada is lagging other countries in preparing for the impacts of climate change, and the new strategy would help address the underinves­tment to date.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A male elk crosses the Yellowhead Highway, a route roughly followed by Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain Pipeline through the Rocky Mountains, in Jasper National Park, Alberta, November, 2016.
REUTERS A male elk crosses the Yellowhead Highway, a route roughly followed by Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain Pipeline through the Rocky Mountains, in Jasper National Park, Alberta, November, 2016.

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