Windsor Star

Consultati­on shows few support scrapping cap and trade: commission­er

-

Ontario’s environmen­tal commission­er says fewer than one per cent of people who weighed in on the government’s decision to scrap the province’s cap and trade system expressed clear support for the move.

Dianne Saxe said her office reviewed most of the 11,000 comments submitted as part of a public consultati­on on a bill introduced last year to dismantle the carbon pricing system brought in by the previous Liberal government. Saxe said almost all respondent­s wrote to voice support for decisive action on climate change, and many were dismayed that cap and trade was being cancelled — particular­ly before a replacemen­t plan was announced.

The legislatio­n to eliminate the cap-and-trade system passed in late October, after the 30-day consultati­on concluded but before the results were made public.

It was introduced in July, but the final vote was delayed when an environmen­tal group launched legal action against the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government, alleging the province had flouted Ontario’s Environmen­tal Bill of Rights by failing to hold public consultati­ons on the issue. The legal action will still move forward on allegation­s that the government also skipped mandatory consultati­ons on a regulation related to the cancellati­on of cap and trade.

A spokeswoma­n for the environmen­t minister said Wednesday the government was elected on a promise to eliminate cap and trade, but did not address Saxe’s analysis of the consultati­on results.

“We heard loud and clear directly from Ontarians that they cannot afford cap and trade,” Emily Hogeveen said in an email. “While some advocate policies that will cost families, we will pursue balanced policies that address our environmen­tal challenges, while not betraying the commitment­s we made to the people.”

She added the province sought input from the public, businesses and other stakeholde­rs before releasing its own climate change plan in November. That plan proposes to use taxpayer dollars to spur private investment in clean technologi­es and create performanc­e standards for large emitters. Saxe said those who weighed in on the cap-and-trade decision expressed concerns about a number of issues.

“The loss of clean economy opportunit­ies was the most common concern expressed in the submission­s. Many were concerned that weakening Ontario’s climate policies would hurt investment in clean technology and risk longterm job creation in a low-carbon economy,” she wrote.

“A number of commenters shared stories about how they benefited, or had hoped to benefit, from programs that re-invested revenues from cap and trade. Some common examples included electric vehicle purchases and energy efficiency retrofits.”

Keith Stewart, senior energy strategist with Greenpeace Canada, said the province is choosing to ignore dissenting voices. “Rather than consider the input from thousands of Ontarians calling for greater action to fight climate change, the Ford government shot the messenger by getting rid of the environmen­tal commission­er. This is government for the polluters, not the people,” he said in a statement.

The government recently announced it was merging the commission­er’s office with that of the auditor general, which critics have said will reduce accountabi­lity on environmen­tal issues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada