Times Colonist

Minister: Tory target ‘floor’ for cutting greenhouse gases

‘We want to try to do better,’ McKenna says

- BRUCE CHEADLE

OTTAWA — Canada’s national target set by the Conservati­ves for cutting greenhouse gas emissions should be considered a floor for future action, federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna said Monday.

The new Liberal government has so far refused to set a carbon reduction target in advance of the COP21 internatio­nal climate conference that begins at the end of the month, citing the need to consult with the provinces before putting in place a credible national plan.

But with environmen­tal groups loudly complainin­g that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will take Stephen Harper’s climate plan to the world, McKenna moved Monday to put some parameters around Canada’s position.

McKenna is in Paris attending ministeria­l meetings in advance of COP21, where the internatio­nal community hopes to set in place a post-2020 framework for global action on climate change.

The Conservati­ves announced in May that Canada’s contributi­on to this year’s Paris talks would be a 30 per cent cut in greenhouse gas emissions below 2005 levels by the year 2030. Canada, however, is not on track to meet its existing 2020 cuts under the 2009 Copenhagen accord, and the Harper government did not provide any policies to meet the more ambitious 2030 goal.

“Yes, that will be the floor, but certainly we want to try to do better,” McKenna said in a conference call after repeatedly skirting the question of targets.

The key, she said, is “to figure out what you can actually do. You can have a target, but you have to be able to meet the target and you have to take concrete actions toward those targets.”

Canadian government­s — Liberal and Conservati­ve alike — have previously agreed to internatio­nal carbon cuts, but failed to implement the policies needed to make those cuts a reality.

The Conservati­ves famously failed to regulate the oil and gas sector despite promising to do so for the better part of a decade.

“That is why it is so important to sit down with the provinces and territorie­s and look at how we can all do our part,” said McKenna. “Much of this is in the jurisdicti­on of the provinces.”

The premiers have been invited to join Trudeau in Paris at the beginning of December, but it remains unclear what specifical­ly Canada brings to COP21.

McKenna, an internatio­nal trade lawyer who worked with the United Nations in negotiatin­g a peace agreement in East Timor, said she has had meetings with France’s foreign and environmen­t ministers and Mexico’s environmen­t minister and plans to meet with her U.S. counterpar­t before returning to Canada on Wednesday.

Federal-provincial dialogue after a decade of division is a good thing, said Stephen Guilbault of Equiterre, but he reminded the Liberals that at some point they’ll have to make some tough decisions.

Citing Saskatchew­an’s premier, Guilbault questioned whether “Brad Wall is going to have an epiphany and say, ‘Oh yeah, let’s go ahead, I’m full in.’ No, we have to be realistic about that. We won’t get everybody on board.”

 ??  ?? Fisheries Minister Hunter Tootoo and Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna last week after being sworn in.
Fisheries Minister Hunter Tootoo and Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna last week after being sworn in.

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