Vancouver Sun

RIO+ 20: CANADA WANTS TO KEEP OIL- SECTOR SUBSIDIES

Sustainabl­e developmen­t group calls news ‘ heartbreak­ing’ ahead of Earth Summit

- BY MIKE DE SOUZA

OTTAWA — Canada is making waves heading into the global Rio+ 20 Earth Summit by trying to prevent the conference from adopting commitment­s requiring an end to taxpayer subsidies of the fossil fuel sector.

Environmen­t Minister Peter Kent was unable to explain why Canadian negotiator­s were trying to ask the conference to “consider” eliminatin­g the subsidies instead of supporting the positions of others, such as the European Union, who are calling for a firm commitment for a full phase- out.

The details of the Canadian government negotiatin­g tactics have emerged through a leaked draft text obtained by Britain’s Guardian newspaper.

“There was a lot of hope around the world that this [ Rio+ 20 Summit] could have been a moment of change and in a lot of ways it’s really sad,” said Aleksandra Nasteska, co- founder of We Canada, an initiative launched by a coalition of volunteers and Canadian organizati­ons promoting sustainabl­e developmen­t, reached by phone in Rio de Janeiro. “It’s been a long process and [ the leaked text] is quite heartbreak­ing to see.”

David Sawyer, an environmen­tal economist and director of climate change and energy at the Internatio­nal Institute for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, has estimated the federal government could save more than $ 1.3 billion a year if it phases out all of the subsidies for the oil and gas industries.

Former Conservati­ve environmen­t minister Jim Prentice, who left politics in November 2010 to accept an executive position at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, has urged Finance Minister Jim Flaherty in a memorandum to phase out the oil and gas subsidies, honouring a commitment made by Canada with the G20 countries. But Flaherty has protected many of the tax incentive programs for oil and gas exploratio­n and developmen­t.

Kent, who is leading Canada’s delegation at the Rio Summit, which marks the 20th anniversar­y of the 1992 Earth Summit that resulted in major internatio­nal environmen­tal agreements, declined to answer questions from Postmedia News about the government’s position.

Regarding Canada’s opposition to recognizin­g a historic principle of “common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities,” Kent’s spokesman, Adam Sweet, acknowledg­ed that Canada doesn’t support the “one size fits all” approach that suggests the richest countries of the world should take on a greater burden than developing countries to promote sustainabl­e developmen­t.

But Canada has recognized in its official submission to the conference that “particular attention should be given to assisting countries that face significan­t capacity challenges.”

Canada has also stated it “believes that countries need to focus and strengthen efforts on the management of their natural resources in a sustainabl­e and socially responsibl­e manner.”

It said that these efforts should include policies to improve natural resource management, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and corporate social responsibi­lity.

Sweet said Canada’s delegation is made up of federal and provincial government officials, led by Keith Christie, an assistant deputy minister from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade.

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