Times Colonist

Canadian emissions shoot higher for first time in years

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — The return of oil and gas production following the devastatin­g Fort McMurray wildfire and a colder than usual winter pushed Canada’s national greenhouse gas emissions up in 2017 for the first time in several years, a new report says.

The latest national inventory report on emissions, filed this week with the United Nations climate change secretaria­t, showed 716 million tonnes of greenhouse gases were produced in Canada in 2017, an increase of eight million tonnes from 2016.

The uptick pushes Canada further away from its Paris climate change agreement pledge to slash emissions to 70 per cent of what they were in 2005 by 2030.

Canada needs to get emissions to no more than 511 million tonnes by 2030 to meet its pledge, even though internatio­nal scientists last year warned the country must have steeper reductions to prevent the impacts of a warming planet from becoming impossible to mitigate.

The report follows one released two weeks ago — made public amid a political battle over the new federal carbon tax — that said Canada is warming twice as fast as the rest of the world.

Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna defended her government’s record on emissions despite the uptick. She said the government’s “strongest” measures to fight pollution hadn’t been implemente­d in 2017, including the carbon tax, clean fuel standards and phasing out coal power. “Canada’s climate plan is working, and the overall trend in emissions is downward toward 2030,” she said.

The 2017 emissions are two per cent below what emissions were in 2005.

Canada’s existing climate change action plan, which includes the carbon tax and subsidies to spur electric vehicle purchases, only gets Canada about 60 per cent of the way to its 2030 commitment. McKenna has previously said she thinks that gap will be closed as people adopt cleaner technology faster than expected.

Environmen­t Canada officials said the report did not analyze the direct impact of carbon pricing. Four provinces had a carbon price in 2017 — British Columbia and Alberta had a direct carbon tax, and Ontario and Quebec had cap-and-trade systems. B.C. and Alberta saw increases in emissions, while Ontario and Quebec saw a decrease.

Conservati­ve environmen­t critic Ed Fast said the 2017 numbers prove the Liberals’ climate plan isn’t working. The Conservati­ves are heavily critical of the carbon tax strategy and plan to eliminate it if elected in the fall. “We don’t believe you can tax your way to a clean environmen­t,” he said.

McKenna has been critical of the Conservati­ves for not saying yet what they would do to cut emissions, but Fast said the Conservati­ve plan will cut emissions and be released in plenty of time for Canadians to judge it before voting day in October.

Emissions went down from electricit­y generation, small vehicles and the chemical industry, but that wasn’t enough to offset the increases in larger vehicle use, residentia­l heating thanks to the cold 2017 winter, and oil production one year after oilsands producers slashed production for two months because of the Fort McMurray fires.

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