Pembina reacts to new report from federal environment commissioner

OTTAWA —
Matt Horne, director of the Pembina Institute's
climate change program, made the following statement concerning Chapter
1, "Climate Change Plans under the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act,"
of the 2011
October report by the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable
Development:  

"The federal government has repeatedly exaggerated the effectiveness of its policies to limit greenhouse gas pollution, and now admits its plan will be 90 per cent less effective than it first claimed. Further, the government has ignored the legal requirement to explain how it will make up for this gap.
 
"Despite years of debate and discussion about federal action on climate change, the Commissioner found that the federal government still does not have a solid management structure in place to achieve its objectives, or properly measure the effectiveness of its policies or spending. This is a recipe for continued failure.

"The Commissioner's findings are especially relevant when looking forward to Canada's 2020 commitments. Canada will fail to live up to those commitments unless it addresses the serious gaps in the ambition, implementation and monitoring of its climate change plans."

Nathan
Lemphers, a senior policy analyst at the Pembina Institute, made the following
statement concerning Chapter
2, "Assessing cumulative environmental
effects of oil sands projects,"
of the 2011 October report by the
Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development:

"Today,
Canada's environment commissioner concluded that the federal government is
not able to adequately assess the cumulative environmental impacts of
oilsands development due to gaps in monitoring data and baseline
information. The implication of this is simple: the government can't claim
to be effectively managing environmental impacts when it is not adequately
assessing what those impacts are.

"Doing
a thorough job of assessing and understanding the environmental impacts is
fundamental to making informed decisions about whether and how development
should proceed. The government is failing on both counts.

"This
report is the latest in a series of reports that contradict the government's claims
about protecting the environment in the oilsands region. Canadians have learned
that their government does not have sufficient information to make informed
decisions, and as a result is unable to properly assess the cumulative environmental
impacts of oilsands development. The only thing diminishing faster than
Canada's international credibility on these matters is the environmental
assessment agency's budget, which will be cut in half over the next two years.

"This report tells
a different story than what the federal government has been saying in the U.S.
and the EU, where it has downplayed environmental concerns in its effort to
lobby for new pipeline approvals and shield the industry from environmental
measures elsewhere."

-30-

Contact:

Matt
Horne

Director, climate change
Cell: 778-235-1476


Nathan
Lemphers

Senior policy analyst, oilsands
Cell: 403-370-9292


Background:

  • A
    detailed table comparing sources of greenhouse gas emissions in Canada is available online.
  • The
    Pembina Institute's fact sheet on the links between oilsands development and
    climate change is available
    online
    .

 

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