Windsor Star

Canada pledges action on global warming

- WILLIAM MARSDEN

NEW YORK — As global carbon emissions continue their record-breaking rise, Canada has joined more than 100 other countries at the United Nations climate summit to pledge action amid cynicism about their strength and sincerity.

UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon opened the one-day summit Tuesday, telling the world leaders, “we are not here to talk, we are here to make world history.”

Actor Leonardo DiCaprio, the newly minted UN Messenger of Peace, told the leaders they had a choice.

“The time to answer the greatest challenge of our existence on this planet is now,” he said. “You can make history or you will be vilified.”

Unlike the leaders of many countries, Prime Minister Stephen Harper declined to show up, preferring to send Environmen­t Minister Leona Aglukkaq. In her speech, Aglukkaq noted that Canada has delivered $1.2 billion in fast- start financing to help developing countries adapt to climate change.

She promised that Canada would take additional action to regulate automobile emissions. The regulation­s will align with the far stricter U. S. standards. Ottawa has estimated this would reduce fuel consumptio­n by 50 per cent by 2025. The transporta­tion sector generates about 25 per cent of Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions, she said.

The announceme­nt wasn’t entirely new. Canada had announced as early as 2010 that it would align its emission standards with those in the U.S. Neverthele­ss, Canada’s emissions will continue to climb, according to an emissions audit submitted annually to the UN, partially because of increased production in the oilsands.

She said Canada was the first major coal user to ban constructi­on of “traditiona­l coal- fired electricit­y generation units.”

“This further cements Canada’s place as a global clean energy leader as we have one of the cleanest energy mixes in the world with more than three- quarters of our electricit­y supply emitting no greenhouse gases,” she said, referring to hydro power.

U. S. President Barack Obama told the summit, “We cannot condemn our children, and their children, to a future that is beyond their capacity to repair.”

“No nation is immune,” he said. “In America, the past decade has been our hottest on record. Along our eastern coast, the city of Miami now floods at high tide. In our west, wildfire season now stretches most of the year. In our heartland, farms have been parched by the worst drought in generation­s, and drenched by the wettest spring in our history. A hurricane left parts of this great city dark and underwater. And some nations already live with far worse. Worldwide, this summer was the hottest ever recorded — with global carbon emissions still on the rise.”

Obama said the U.S., which is the second largest carbon emission producer next to China, has “begun to do something about it” with investment­s in clean energy, stricter regulation­s on car emissions as well as energy consumptio­n in homes, factories and commercial buildings.

 ??  ?? Leona Aglukkaq
Leona Aglukkaq

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