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Ontario climate change plan includes fund to help big polluters reduce emissions

The Ontario government unveiled its plan to combat climate change Thursday, including a fund that commits public money to entice companies to reduce emissions.

'Unfortunately, Ontario wants to go back in time,' federal minister says

Ontario Environment Minister Rod Phillips unveils the province's new climate change plan at a conservation area in Nobleton, Ont., north of Toronto, Thursday afternoon. (Tijana Martin/Canadian Press)

The Ontario government unveiled its plan to combat climate change Thursday, includinga fund that commits public money to entice companies to reduce emissions.

The regime, called thePreserving and Protecting our Environment for Future Generations: A Made-In-Ontario Environment Plan,aims to keep the province working toward meeting the emissions-reduction goals in the Paris Accord. Under that international agreement, Canada has committed to reducing emissions by 30 per cent of 2005 levels by 2030."

Ontario has reduced emissions by 22 per cent,Environment Minister Rod Phillips told a news conference Thursday afternoonat a conservation area in Nobleton, Ont., just north of Toronto.

A major plank of the new plan is the Ontario Carbon Trust, to which the Ontario government will commit some $400 millionover four years, to workwith the private sector on developing clean technologies to reduce emissions.

The trust includes a $50 million "reverse auction," which will allow businesses to send in proposals for emission-reduction projects and bid on government contracts that will be awarded based on the lowest-cost reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.

The governmenthopes its investment in helping companies to reduce their carbon footprint will "unlock" more than $1 billion of private capital for the same purpose.

Other features of the plan include measures to ensure "transparent, real-time"monitoring of waste and stormwaterin provincial waterways, conserving land and green space and reducing litter in the province's communities.

"It's a plan that represents a clean break from the status quo, and it's a plan that balances a healthy environment and a healthy economy," Phillips said.

The province will also engage in an Ontario-wide assessment of the impacts of climate change to determine how it's affecting businesses, families and communities in order to find further solutions, and will consult stakeholders to develop performance standards forlarger emitters.

In response to Thursday's announcement, OntarioGreen Party Leader Mike Schreinersaid: "We need a climate plan, not a litter-reduction plan. This is not a climate plan."

BeforeThursday's news conference, Phillips said Ontario must address climate change, but not through a carbon tax.

The Ford government bringsin its climate change strategy against the backdrop of its bitter fight with the Trudeau government over carbon pricing. Ford fired the latest shot Wednesday,blamingthe planned federal carbon tax for General Motors'plan to close its assembly plant in Oshawa, even though GM announced at the same time it intends to close four U.S. plants too.

Ontario is currently joining Saskatchewan in acourt battleagainst the move to impose a federal carbon pricing schemeon provinces that don't have one of their own. Ottawa has shot back by bypassing the Ford government and sending $420 million from its Low Carbon Economy Fund directly to cities, hospitals, universities, schoolsand businesses to help with efficiency programs and other emission-reduction efforts.

On Thursday, federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna was quick to criticize Ontario's new plan.

"Unfortunately, Ontario wants to go back in time," McKenna said in an interview with CBC News.

"I think Canadians understand that it shouldn't be free to pollute," she said.

McKenna said the federal government remains committed to meeting its 2030 climate target, and said if provinces don't step up to help with that effort it will act. While slamming Ontario, she praised other provinces like B.C. and Quebec, which have put a price on carbon and started developing good jobs in the green technology field.

"The world needs clean solutions, and Canadian companies are providing them," she said.

'Made-in-Ontario solution'

Asked Wednesday how the province can reduce greenhouse gasemissions without putting a price on carbon, Phillips responded with questions of his own.

"I put the question back to all the proponents of carbon taxation:How can they be so focused on just onesolutionwhen we're dealing with something this complicated?" he said. "Are they dedicated to a carbon tax or are they dedicated to real action on climate change and reducingGHGs?"

One of Ford's first moves as premier was scrappingthe previousLiberal government's climate change plan, which was built on a cap-and-trade program, forcing companies to pay for permits to emitGHGs. Ford campaigned vigorously against cap-and-trade, characterizing it as a carbon taxand calling it the "worst tax ever."

The PCs had promised during the election campaign to create an emissions-reductionfund, offering public money to companies that come up with innovative ways to reduce their greenhouse gas output. That wasa signalthe plan would borrow from the model currently used by Australia's conservative government a plan that has been criticized for failing to reduce the country's emissions.

Philips has said Wednesday he waslooking to jurisdictions around the world, including Australia.

"The situation in Ontario is very different from the situation inAlbertaor the situation in New Brunswick because our electricity sector andour grid is almost 100 per cent green," Phillips said. "This is why a made-in-Ontario solution makes sense."

Ontario has already brought down its greenhouse gas emissions by 22 per cent from 2005 levels, in large part due to decommissioning all coal-fired power generation, but also because of the drop in the province's manufacturing output since that date.

A report issued Tuesday by the United Nationsenvironment office said worldwide greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, and that emissions must drop 55 per cent from2017 levels by 2030 to prevent the global average temperaturefrom rising more than 1.5 degrees.