Will this be the emissions target Canadians can take seriously? - Action News
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Will this be the emissions target Canadians can take seriously?

Canada has never had a hard time setting targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The challengehas been toactually meetthose targets.

People have a right to be skeptical and accountability will be key

A person walks past a climate change-themed nature mural on Earth Day in Toronto on Thursday, April 22, 2021. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Canada has never had a hard time setting targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The challengehas been toactually meetthose targets.

So you would be forgiven for casting a skeptical eye at the Liberal government's pledge to now aim for a reduction inCanada's emissions of 40 to 45 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030 adeeper cutthan the 30 per cent reduction Canada has been promisingto achievesince 2015.

But after 30 years ofmaking international commitments and failing to live up to them,this countrynow hasa plausible path to getto that previous target.

Climate change is achallenge thatdemands ambition. Some argue that Canada should be shooting for an even steeper decrease in emissions.Butambition needs to be matched withaction and accountability.

"I come from the business world. I used to be a CEO. And what you do is you set out a plan and you actually deliver on the plan and then you set out new targets," Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson toldCBC News ahead of Thursday's announcement.

"And then at the beginning of the year, sometimes you don't know fully how you're going to achieve those targets, but part of the target-setting exercise is to ensure that you're actually stretching. If you've ever read Jim Collins' book Built to Last, that's how successful companies often run their businesses, because if you actually are setting targets that you know can achieve from day one, you're probably not pushing yourself enough."

WATCH: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announcesnew emissions targets

Trudeau announces new emissions targets

3 years ago
Duration 1:18
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke to the U.S. Climate Summit on Thursday.

Collins is a proponent of companiessetting what he calls "big, hairy, audacious goals."

A large part of the government's argument for setting a new target rests on its claimthat italready hasdelivered a plan that would get Canada past the old 2030 target and that this new target comes at a moment of risingambitions for climate policyin Canada and abroad.

In 2015, when Justin Trudeau's government came to power, Canada's emissions were on track to increase by 12 per cent through 2030.

By the time the 2019 election rolled around, projections showed that thanks to federal and provincial policies Canada was on track to reduce emissions by 19 per cent below 2005 levels.

Last December, when theTrudeau government released an updated plan that included future increases to the federal carbon price, itprojected that it could achieve a 32 per cent reduction by 2030. With this week's budget, it increased that projection to 36 per cent.

Policies still have to be implemented and it would be naive to imagine the next nine years will go perfectly smoothly. Plotting a path is easier than following it. But at least it's now possible to see a path.

What's more, the ground floor for Canadian climate policy may have beenraised last week when Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole tabled a planthat while debatable in its detailsand perhaps its commitmentboth accepts the wisdom of pricing carbon and offers a realisticstrategy toachievea 30 per cent emissionsreduction.

Not ambitious enough?

The fact that there is nosolid plan yetto get to 40 or 45 per cent is no small detail, though the same could be said of every country that announced a new target this week. Skepticism might be warranted. Domestic or international politics might beat play here though politics that leads to more ambitious action should be welcomed.

But there's a clear case for more ambition. And one way to make sure the new target isn't just anotherbig number written down on a piece of paper is to ensure that someone is held accountablefor pursuing it.

The Trudeau government has said that Canada, like other countries, should aim for net-zero emissions by 2050but there are good reasons to movesooner rather than later both in terms ofavoidingemissions and in mitigatingthe cost oftakingaction.

Some will say that the Liberal target is not big, hairy or audacious enough. The Biden administration is promising a 50 per cent reduction, though any comparison between Canada and the United States must account for differences in both the source of emissions and the cost of reductions,not to mention the stringency of current policy.

And there's disagreement over what constitutes Canada's "fair share" of the emissions cuts requiredto keep further global warming close to 1.5 degrees Celsius. The Climate Action Network says that, based on Canada's situation and the circumstances of other countries, a fair share would be 60 per cent.

Holding the feds' feet to the fire

But even hitting the Trudeau government's new target range will be difficult. Climate experts described it on Thursday as a "very tall order" and a "big lift."

Either way, there is a realneed for accountability this time.Catherine Abreu, executive director of the Climate Action Network, said the problem with past targets was a lack of accountability.

A youth climate protester with a decorated sign standsat the Queen Street West and Bay Street intersection in downtown Toronto onFriday, March 19, 2021.
A youth climate protester holds a signin downtown Toronto onFriday, March 19, 2021. (Sam Nar/CBC)

"For me, a huge takeaway from this whole conversation is that Canada's failure in the past is not just a failure of ambition. It's a failure of climate governance," she said.

"And that's why improving or passing Bill C-12 [the Canadian Net-Zero Emissions Accountability Act] is so essential because it will set up that regular, formal process that not just this government, but all future governments will have to follow to set climate targets and set plans to meet them."

Abreu notes that Bill C-12, the government's climate accountability legislation, would require the government to produce a plan for meeting its 2030 target within six months of the bill's passage and a review process would evaluate the country's progress toward that target.

Abreu said the bill should be amended to require that the government meet a 2030 target.

Climate change is a threat thatimposes a moral imperative and the political imperative may have become more urgent in recent years.But building out the reporting and accountability ruleson those targets might ensure that no government is ever again able to set a targetand then forget it.

Corrections

  • This story has been updated from an earlier version that stated in 2019 Canada was on track to reduce emissions by 21 per cent below 2005 levels. The correct number is 19 per cent below 2005 levels.
    May 20, 2021 7:01 PM ET