Times Colonist

Canada ignored audit’s call to count logging emissions: NDP

- STEFAN LABBE

The NDP’s federal environmen­t critic says Canada is ignoring calls to close loopholes in how it reports carbon emissions from logging — which some experts suggest could amount to 90 million tonnes a year.

A March 2023 audit from Commission­er of the Environmen­t and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Jerry DeMarco found the federal government had failed to properly account for emissions from the country’s forestry sector. Among several recommenda­tions, DeMarco — who serves under the Office of the Auditor General of Canada — said the federal government “did not provide a clear and complete picture” of greenhouse gases from forestry and called for an independen­t expert review to assess any gaps.

A year later, Laurel Collins, NDP member of Parliament for Victoria and the party’s environmen­t and climate change critic, said the government’s response has been to take a “really narrow review” of how it counts forestry emissions at the same time Canada experience­d its worst wildfire season in recorded history.

“If we continue to lie to ourselves about our forestry emissions, we don’t have a hope of getting better,” said Collins. “We don’t have a hope of making this right.”

In December 2023, a government document circulated to stakeholde­rs and later reviewed by Glacier Media outlined three options on how Ottawa could change its emission auditing process.

The options all focus on Canada’s baseline for assessing emission reductions. None of the options mention an external review and none address how Canada might close its emissions reporting gap.

Evidence suggests that gap could be huge. Between 2005 and 2021, the country’s national emissions inventory report said forests in Canada absorbed just shy of five million tonnes a year, making it a small carbon sink.

But in research published in the peer-reviewed journal Frontiers in Forests and Global Change in January, experts found the government failed to account for nearly 100 million tonnes of forest carbon emissions.

That would put logging emissions on par with Canada’s electricit­y sector.

The discrepanc­y in emissions data comes from the way the government reports wildfire emissions, say experts.

Carbon pollution from wildfires is not counted because it’s considered “natural.” But once forests grow back — reaching commercial maturity at 76 years old — the government inventory starts to count all the carbon those trees suck out of the atmosphere, even though they were never re-planted after logging, explained Jay Malcolm, a study co-author and professor emeritus at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Forestry.

“That is the entire difference,” Malcolm said at the time. “It’s kind of a shell game.”

In the end, the researcher­s found total area logged was a “significan­t predictor of net forestry emissions.”

Last month, Collins cited the peer-reviewed study in a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in which she slammed the government for failing to follow through on the commission­er’s key recommenda­tions and ignoring calls to fix how it reports logging emissions.

The accounting flaws, wrote the NDP critic, inaccurate­ly portray the forestry sector as a net-zero emitter. That “justifies high-emission harvesting activities,” raises questions about transparen­cy and objectivit­y, and “calls into question the legitimacy and efficacy of the review process.”

Should the annual gap in forestry carbon emissions turn out to be accurate, the industry’s average historical annual emissions would skyrocket to roughly 90 million tonnes, officially making it a carbon emitter.

By maintainin­g the status quo and portraying the logging sector as an industry that absorbs as many emissions as it releases, Collins told Trudeau companies are unduly given an advantage over other sectors when it comes to things like carbon pricing.

“The difficulty is that if we don’t do this, it means that we actually can’t make the policy changes needed to reduce our emissions,” Collins said.

“And it also means we’re painting a rosier picture for Canada [and] whether or not we’re meeting our climate targets.”

Glacier Media asked how the federal government accounted for the missing 90 million tonnes of forestry emissions identified by outside experts. In an unattribut­ed statement sent two weeks later, a spokespers­on for Natural Resources Canada said its method for reporting emissions from Canadian forests is informed by “science- and evidence-based best practices and internatio­nal standards.”

The statement read: “…the Government of Canada remains committed to science-based best practices, and continuous improvemen­t and review of techniques to ensure accuracy and accordance with internatio­nal standards and leadership.”

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