Vancouver Sun

What the parties are promising on climate change

Talk is refreshing, but action is needed, Marc Lee writes.

- Marc Lee is a senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es, B.C. Office.

In the middle of the federal election campaign, Canadians hit the streets demanding climate action. Here’s a look at where the major parties stand with two days to go before the vote.

The Liberals would reset Canada’s long-term greenhouse gas emission target to “net zero” by 2050, as would the Greens. The NDP would do essentiall­y the same thing: science-based targets to keep the global temperatur­e increase below 1.5 degrees Celsius.

“Net” is shorthand, meaning Canada would put emissions into the atmosphere in 2050, but as-yet-undevelope­d technologi­es would take an equivalent amount of carbon from the air and put it safely undergroun­d.

The Liberal promise to plant two billion trees over 10 years is similar. There’s nothing wrong with planting trees, but this should not take the place of actually reducing emissions from fossil fuel production and consumptio­n.

Getting to “net zero” is hard because of federal support for growth of the oil and gas industry, including purchasing the Trans Mountain Pipeline and taking over its expansion plan so that Alberta can get more oil to market.

Politician­s cannot have it both ways: promising climate action while digging deeper into fossil fuels. Indeed, we need to start planning for the wind down of fossil fuel industries. The Greens most clearly reject new fossil fuel infrastruc­ture of any sort and would phase out oil and gas production in Canada, including the oilsands by 2035.

The NDP doesn’t comment on Trans Mountain expansion, but would allow provinces a veto over such projects in their jurisdicti­on. They also call for more domestic upgrading and refining of Canadian oil.

The federal government establishe­d a modestly rising floor price on carbon in provinces without carbon pricing. It is currently $20 per tonne — 4.3 cents per litre at the pump — rising annually to $50 per tonne in 2022. All revenues

We need to start planning for the wind down of fossil fuel.

will flow back to households in the province where the tax is collected.

None of the Liberals, NDP or Greens proposes to raise the federal carbon price floor in spite of tabling more ambitious emissions targets. The Conservati­ves, on the other hand, would kill the federal regime in favour of “green technology” and “emissions standards for major emitters,” but it is not clear what this means.

A flip side of carbon pricing is eliminatin­g fossil fuel subsidies as promised by the Greens and NDP. These subsidies include various incentives and tax breaks aimed at fossil fuel extraction as well as programs supporting innovation and environmen­tal measures.

All major parties call for public support to make homes more energy efficient. The Liberals, NDP and Greens mostly differ on how quick and comprehens­ive such a program would be.

The Conservati­ves instead, more narrowly, propose a tax credit for home renovation­s for owners of single-family homes. A household would need to have sufficient taxable income to benefit from this tax credit.

Renters and those living in multi-unit buildings have largely been neglected by past energy efficiency programs. The NDP notably singles out retrofits for social housing across the country.

The Greens and the NDP would also require all new homes constructe­d after 2030 to meet net zero standards. This would mean high-efficiency housing design accompanie­d by renewables to offset year-round energy demand.

On transporta­tion, the NDP and Greens support electrific­ation of transporta­tion. The Greens also propose to ban the sale of internal combustion engines in 2030.

Only the NDP promises substantia­l investment­s to expand public transit and would create permanent funding starting with $6.5 billion over four years and a commitment to work toward free public transit. The Conservati­ves would instead give public transit users a small break by reinstatin­g a tax credit.

It is refreshing to see political parties talk about more aggressive climate action even if short on details. The people have spoken, but given a track record of government­s establishi­ng targets and timelines without the policy measures to achieve them, we need to see more ambitious, concrete action.

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