Oil Sands Truth: Shut Down the Tar Sands

Canada dead last on climate change

Canada dead last on climate change
We can no longer use the U.S. as an excuse for inaction
GERALD BUTTS, Freelance
Published: Wednesday, July 08

Here is a sobering thought to consider as Canada prepares to assume the presidency of the G8 following this week's meeting in Italy: Canada has for the first time replaced the United States as the worst performer on tackling climate change among G8 nations. This was revealed in the recent G8 Climate Scorecard, released jointly by WWF, the global conservation organization, and the global insurance company Allianz.

The report confirms recent events in North America: There is a new worldview in the U.S. as it rejoins the global community, while Canada continues with the "No, we can't" approach adopted by successive Canadian governments.

The fact that the U.S. is rapidly leaving Canada in its wake on climate change is particularly important, as Canada's political leaders have repeatedly claimed that Canada couldn't afford to move faster or further than our major trading partner.

If that argument ever had merit, it certainly doesn't now as we see the difference that political leadership can make.

More has been done in the U.S. in the last six months than in the last 30 years. We have seen tough new standards for greenhouse-gas emissions from cars introduced by the Obama administration. There have been massive investments in energy efficiency, green power and public transit. A renewed respect for science, backed by new funding. Climate legislation that would cap emissions from large industrial polluters has been passed by the House of Representatives, and could become law before the international negotiations over a new global deal on climate action in Copenhagen later this year.

The U.S. remains far short of the level of emissions reductions that are needed, and much remains to be done, but it is a remarkable record in a short period of time.

Perhaps most important, Washington will bring these deeds, and not just words, to Copenhagen as proof of a renewed commitment to join the global community in stepping up the fight against climate change.

The Canadian government, meantime, has not only backtracked on its commitment to regulate industrial greenhouse-gas emissions by January 2010, but has threatened to challenge the new California low-carbon fuel standard and the U.S. federal efforts to reduce carbon pollution under international trade law.

Some of the reasons for Canada's intransigence on climate change are easy to understand. There is no path forward that will allow for both the rapid expansion of the tar sands and for Canada to achieve the kinds of reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions that scientists say are necessary to avoid climate change. This stumbling block will have to be cleared if Canada is to join G8 leaders in contributing to a solution.

The scorecard shows that none of the G8 countries have yet solved their carbon-emissions problems. But there is evidence of a more considered approach in Europe and now the U.S., with concrete steps taken and planned to prevent the worst effects of climate change and leave a better world for our kids. In this respect, Canada remains an outsider.

The Canadian government is placing an "all-in" bet that the tar sands and other fossil fuels will power the Canadian economy for the foreseeable future. This bet is based on a large number of assumptions that are increasingly untenable or uncertain: That unproven and expensive technology will emerge quickly enough to reduce our emissions, that other nations will take on extra emissions reductions on our behalf, and that we have more time than most scientists predict to prevent the worst effects of climate change.

Even worse for Canadians, we risk missing out on a once-in-a-generation opportunity to join and lead a green job revolution.

Given recent actions in the U.S, it is an increasingly lonely bet. Even if we win, Canadians might not be interested in claiming the prize: a future in which Canada is the energy sweatshop to the world, where countries import our energy while turning a blind eye to standards that they would never permit within their own borders.

As we prepare to participate in the Copenhagen climate summit in December and to play host to next year's G8 meeting in Huntsville, Ont., we should be taking the longer view and building a legacy of a green economy that will make Canadians proud. The good news is that progress in the U.S. shows how much can change, and how quickly, with a simple change in mindset, from "No we can't" to "Yes we can."

http://www2.canada.com/montrealgazette/features/viewpoints/story.html?id...

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