
A credible climate plan for Ontario
Submitted by OCAA on Sun, 03/11/2007 - 23:00.
The Toronto Star
No one is saying it will be easy but the sooner the province acts to cut emissions, the less it will cost Provincial governments possess powerful tools for addressing global warming. And although the current flurry of federal eco-spending announcements cannot paper over the lack of a national climate change plan or how the federal government's poor performance on the climate change file is jeopardizing both our international reputation and the environment, it has been heartening to see Manitoba and Quebec step up to the plate with their own climate plans, and to hear what was in British Columbia's Speech from the Throne. So where is Ontario? Last week, Premier Dalton McGuinty signalled to a friendly Liberal audience that fighting global warming will be a key plank in his election platform, and other parties are also drafting climate strategies. What constitutes an "adequate" climate plan looks very different if you want to actually reduce pollution sufficiently to solve the problem, as opposed to merely slowing its rate of growth. And if you take the science seriously, then being adequately ambitious means making the strongest possible effort to meet Kyoto targets by 2012, cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 30 per cent by 2020 relative to 1990 levels, and getting to 80 per cent reductions by 2050. No one is saying this will be easy. Ontario's greenhouse gas emissions come from our coal-fired electricity plants, from our cars and trucks, from heating our houses, from factories and farms. We are indeed "addicted" to fossil fuels, even though we know that burning them blankets the Earth with heat-trapping gases. And due to the lack of any real action to date, Ontario's emissions have grown 15 per cent since 1990. On the other hand, the alternative – doing little or nothing – is not only irresponsible, but ultimately will be more costly, according to the recent report by the World Bank's former chief economist, Sir Nicholas Stern, that was commissioned by the British government and endorsed by a who's who of global economists. It says failure to check global warming will likely wreak greater havoc with human societies than both World Wars and the Great Depression put together. This is corroborated by the UN science report released last month that found that the pace of warming and the impact on ecosystems is growing and potentially catastrophic. The good news is that the faster that Ontario acts, the less it will cost. And given that our energy use is already much more wasteful than other industrialized countries like Germany, the U.K. and Japan that use half the energy per dollar of output that Canada does, many of the solutions will save us money as we burn less fossil fuel in more efficient homes, power plants, vehicles and workplaces. It will be a win-win scenario when we act and the quicker we act, the more we will benefit. Once we commit to Kyoto and longer-term pollution reduction targets, there are some basic ways Ontario can tackle global warming.
Ontario can also join the parade of U.S. states, Quebec and B.C. in adopting California vehicle fuel efficiency standards that slash emissions from cars, while laying the groundwork for building the energy efficient vehicles of the future here in Ontario. Efficiency standards lag behind Europe, Japan, Australia, California and even China. Ontario needs to improve efficiencies drastically to remain competitive globally. We also need to better utilize our largely untapped potential to generate electricity from industrial and commercial waste heat. When those pesky pollsters call, people are taking the time to say how concerned they are about global warming, how frustrated they are with government bickering, how upset they are with industries that seek to evade pollution controls, and how anxious they are to do something, anything, if only they had some help with what and how. We know that politicians read the polls, especially in the lead up to an election. The question now is whether the climate plans on offer for the coming provincial election add up to a credible Ontario-based solution that gets us to Kyoto and beyond, or simply more hot air. Keith Stewart is manager of the Climate Change Campaign for WWF — Canada. The following organizations support this position: Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment, David Suzuki Foundation, Environmental Defence, Forest Ethics, Greenpeace — Canada, Ontario Clean Air Alliance, Ontario Nature, Pembina Institute, Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario, Sierra Club of Canada — Ontario chapter, Sierra Legal Defence Fund, Wildlands League and WWF — Canada.
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