(MENAFN- Trend News Agency)
Canada released its first real roadmap to meeting 2030 climate
targets on Tuesday, laying out detailed plans and C$9.1 billion
($7.3 billion) in new spending to cut planet-warming carbon
emissions after years failing to meet its goals, Trend reports citing
Reuters .
The Emissions Reduction Plan (ERP) is the first time Canada has
had a comprehensive plan, rather than just a collection of
policies, setting out how it will meet its international commitment
to cut carbon emissions 40-45% below 2005 levels by 2030.
Environmental think tanks called it a 'watershed moment' for
Canadian climate policy, but warned Liberal Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau's government needed to follow through.
'A plan is just a plan without action. Expedited implementation
will be key to success, and Canada now needs to shift into high
gear,' said Rick Smith, president of the Canadian Climate
Institute.
Canada has missed every emissions reduction target it has ever
set but Trudeau said fighting climate change was one of his
government's top priorities during last year's election campaign,
and a recent deal with the opposition New Democrats should ensure
the passage of climate legislation for the next three years.
Key measures include a zero-emissions vehicle mandate that is
more ambitious than anything proposed by Canada's neighbor the
United States, and a target for reducing emissions from the oil and
gas sector 42% below current levels by 2030.
The ERP was introduced under the requirements of Canada's
Net-Zero Accountability Act, which the government adopted last
summer in a bid to produce more binding climate policies.
The country is the world's fourth largest oil producer and 10th
largest carbon emitter. The oil and gas industry is its highest
polluting industry, followed by transportation.
Greenhouse gas emissions from the oil and gas sector have risen
for the last two decades, meaning the 42% cut from current levels
will only amount to a 31% cut from 2005 levels.
That lower target for the oil and gas sector means other parts
of the economy will have to make deeper emissions cuts if Canada is
to hit its overall 40-45% reduction goal, said Simon Dyer, deputy
executive director of the Pembina Institute.
'We believe the oil and gas sector has the ability to do more,
and do its fair share,' Dyer said.
Trudeau said the emissions targets had to be realisable as well
as ambitious and the electricity sector, for example, would be
making much bigger cuts.
'Different sectors have different expectations...Canadians have
had far too long of targets that have been set, but not achieved,'
Trudeau told a news conference in Vancouver.
The ERP set an interim goal of cutting planet warming carbon
emissions 20% below 2005 levels by 2026. While not an official
target like the 2030 objective, the 2026 goal will be a major
measure of whether Canada is on track.
The government is also introducing a mandate that 60% of
light-duty vehicles sold in 2030 must be zero-emissions, rising to
100% by 2035.
Those targets put Canada 'among the pack of leading
jurisdictions' in terms of zero-emission vehicle mandates, said
Merran Smith, executive director of Clean Energy Canada.
In the United States, the Biden administration so far has
declined to set a firm deadline for phasing out sales of combustion
vehicles. Instead, President Joe Biden has set a target for 50% of
new cars and light trucks sold in the United States to be electric
by 2030.
($1 = 1.2494 Canadian dollars)
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