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Mesdames et monsieurs, we have quorum. Welcome to meeting 21 of the Legislative Committee on Bill .
Would the members please take their places? We'll get started. We have a lot of work ahead, as we have been saying, so we probably need to pick up the pace just a little bit.
We'll start with a new clause, 8.1. I'll point out that there are three amendments that address it: amendment NDP-13, amendment L-19, and a new government one, which has just been distributed. All are very similar.
We'll start off with Mr. Cullen addressing amendment NDP-13, and we'll take it from there.
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Mr. Chair, I know there have been some conversations between the parties to bring about, through this act, a concept that we think is long overdue. There's a need, particularly when you're talking about climate change, to look at significant areas within the country, to be able to designate those areas that are more greatly affected by what's happening to the planet's climate.
From my riding's perspective in northwestern British Columbia, we've seen the first onset of one of the fundamental changes with the mountain pine beetle epidemic that's going through our forests now, into Alberta, and coming across the boreal. It's a clear example of a place that has been identified by all sides of the debate as something significant, or a so-called “hot zone”, as used colloquially, as is the far north. The evidence that has been given to us at this committee and every committee I've sat on that's dealt with climate change has realized that when we talk about overall average temperature changes that happen on the planet, there's a disproportionate effect that happens in the far north in particular. An average two-degree rise across the planet actually can translate to a 10- to 14-degree rise in our northern sectors.
Now, imagining those types of climatic changes in our far north, they affect just about every facet of life in that region—cultural, economic, hunting, transportation, everything—and it creates an increased level of unpredictability. Therefore, from the community's perspective, and the government that is meant to represent that community, we need to act in a more urgent fashion.
We've moved an initial motion. We believe the Liberals have one as well. And there is one forthcoming that committee members have in front of them from the government that might allow us to seek a compromise position on this, which we would encourage.
I'm not sure which process is best in terms of looking at these. If it's the will of the chair and the committee to move straight to this new motion put forward, which I think is cleaner in language.... That's not to say that the language wasn't clean in our motion, but the notion of significant areas brought forward by the NDP is now being presented by the government.
I can't actually read the number this is listed as. I'm not sure that it's been given a number yet per se.
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Yes. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Yes, we've distributed to you, Mr. Chair, amendment G-1, to clear up the language of both the Liberal and NDP amendments. The amendments from the NDP and the Liberals are similar. We want to broaden the minister's ability to take certain actions in the designated areas, in significant areas.
This has been tabled. Hopefully, we will find acceptance of this. It brings us to the area we want. Both amendments, I think, are heading in the right direction, but there are some problems with the language. This cleans it up. So this is our amendment, amendment G-1.
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Just to concur with that, when we initially put this to design, it wasn't any intrusion on any area or lake or park or designated spot within a province or any other territory or jurisdiction. It was to allow the government to identify what was actually going on and to help better identify what's happening in particularly sensitive areas.
The areas most commonly referred to are the far north and the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence region. By population and pollution impact, they have been the places where we have been most lacking in terms of information and research. I think there's something significant when a population realizes this and such areas have been identified as areas of concern. If the science tells us that, which it is doing particularly in the far north right now—that's the one I'm focused on—then there clearly needs to be a greater call to research and understand the problem, particularly to get at the source point of the problem or where it's coming from.
We have to remind committee members that a lot of this pollution not only doesn't know provincial jurisdictions, it doesn't know national boundaries either. The effect is happening in these places in particular.
When we talk about climate change...I would invite all committee members to come and visit what a forest looks like when a beetle has gone through it. It's something to see, and it's important to the people of that region. I can tell you for certain that to have some acknowledgement of that, and to then have assistance with the research component at the very least in order to overcome the problem they're facing....
An imbalance is what typically happens with this type of cause and effect. We've seen this in Africa. That's where the greatest effect will be happening in terms of economic punishment and climate change. We've also seen it in the far north. Ironically, both regions have the least political clout, if you will.
Neither the government's amendment nor the original one the NDP put forward says the government can come in and start to tell the provinces what they must and must not do. This provides a focus and says there must be greater research put into a particular area because it is an area of greater sensitivity. That's acknowledged by the science, not by the politics. At the end of the day, that's what is most important about this particular issue. As often as we can, we should not allow just the politicians to make decisions as to what areas are going to get funding or which ones get attention. We must allow the scientists to say that these are the areas of greatest concern and we should direct attention and research and funding in those directions.
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Mr. Chairman, on the point of consultation with first nations, it would be news to a lot of the first nations I represent that they were meant to be consulted on a lot of the government's actions, because they don't get consulted on most things.
I understand the intention of Mr. Jean's amendment, and the original G-1 is actually better without it. As Mr. Moffet said, we're not talking about some sort of sweeping industrial changes that are going to be imparted. We're only talking about the ability of the government to say there's something significant going on here and we should do a bunch of research into it and provide the communities and the government with more tools to be able to address it.
I guarantee you, to go through a consultation process over something like this is really a recipe for delay. One thing we don't have the luxury of is delay when we're talking about areas that are increasingly affected by climate change. It's to say we know there's a problem going on in the far north, but before we understand it better and apply more funding to it, we're going to consult with the territory, the first nations, and make sure that everybody's on side with the type of research we want to do. That happens across the bureaucratic lines already. The scientists between the federal and the provincial and territorial levels talk about what kinds of projects they most need to do.
I very much appreciate the intention of Mr. Jean's amendment, but I would strongly encourage committee members not to put things into this bill that cause further delay on an issue that we've had far too many years delaying on already. It's just calling for urgency, to say there's a problem in a particular area. Most of those areas have already been identified. It allows the minister to say we're going to put some more research and funding into that, and that will be a benefit to the first nations and to the province and territories as well. Let's not build something in that will cause us to slow this process down.
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This will hopefully be a less controversial amendment to move. This came up in the testimony of a number of witnesses. We would like to amend proposed subsection 53.1(3) to read:
Information provided to the Minister under paragraph (2)(a) shall be published in the national inventory of releases of pollutants under sections 48, 49, 50, 51, 52 and 53.
For those of you who don't have CEPA at your fingertips or ready to go at all times in your minds, this closes a loophole that witnesses identified. When the national pollution inventory is done, there are occasions when companies will claim confidentiality over some pieces of it that are completely unrelated; therefore, the government is unable to understand how much pollution is actually being released into the air.
We think these changes tighten up the reporting. If you can't measure it, you can't manage it. This has been an ongoing problem with CEPA and our ability to manage certain industries.
This amendment is a friendly one, so I'll open it to debate for other committee members.
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Take it away, indeed, Chair. This is where we're getting to the heart of the matter in terms of the ability.
One of the first things that came forward out of and what we noticed most immediately was this lack of firm targets, greenhouse gas targets, for the country that set us forward in the coming years. The challenges that Canada as a nation has faced when meeting our international obligations are the accountability, to be blunt, and the ability to set out a target, hold that target firm, and do the necessary things to meet the target that we believe is achievable.
There's been constant debate around the targets that were set in the Kyoto process and there's been constant debate as to whether the targets were appropriate or not or whether Canada should be in or out. What that has actually led to is a certain amount of seizure of actually getting the thing done. As a result, we don't know what this year's reporting will be, but so far we rank absolutely at the bottom of the pile when it comes to industrialized nations and dealing with greenhouse gas emissions.
I can recall, not so fondly for committee, being at the Nairobi meetings at the last UN gathering and Canada consistently winning what was called the fossil award. This was the award given out every day to only one country at the United Nations meetings that was performing the worst in the negotiations, and the worst by record. I don't raise this issue in a partisan nature to say it was one government or another. It was the collective of the two, in fact, and what the world body was seeing in terms of the results of Canada's intentions, put in Canada's words, “our promises and commitments”, in comparison to what was actually getting done.
NDP-15.1 is based upon what the witnesses have told us is necessary, not just here at the committee, but also at previous committees, including the environment committee that wrote an extensive report in the previous Parliament. One of the things that the business community, the science community, and the non-profit sector told us was that we needed a level of certainty in order for business to make the investments and to do the planning. They needed to know what the actual goal was. I'm sure all committee members have met with, particularly on the industrial side, various lobbyists and representatives from business who have said, “The uncertainty question precludes us from actually making the investments required.” It creates an unlevel playing field, where some businesses are going ahead and making investments that they believe they're committed to by their national government and others don't. That's not a climate in which business can thrive.
NDP-15.1 has a number of important sections to it. It clearly points out science-based targets, targets that we know we need to achieve in order to both fall in line with our international agreements and prevent dangerous climate change from happening. There's no more an appropriate expression than an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure when it comes to climate change. We've seen various communities across the country starting to appreciate what the actual costs are of mitigation. I will be clear again with committee members. Mitigation is when you pay for the thing that's already happened, as opposed to prevention.
This is an amendment to that we think will give the bill a lot more credibility, frankly, in terms of a broader appeal. Canadians will understand this and will appreciate that there are firm and committed targets built into the legislation.
The current government is very enthused about the notions of accountability and transparency. This has been one of their alleged hallmarks. Proposed subsection 64.1(3) in this does exactly that. It demands this government, or whatever government in future political manifestations, to report back to Canadians and to consistently report back on the planning and also report back on the performance.
I can remember some of my Conservative colleagues struggling with an ability to actually grasp what the government had or had not done when the Liberals were in power. It was extremely frustrating, because you simply couldn't have the debate if you didn't know what the government had achieved or not achieved. It created, if I can share this with you, an element of a fear of failure within the government because they didn't want to report on anything, and they certainly didn't want to report on anything that hadn't worked.
When trying to address things like climate change, there must be an element of risk taking with government programs. There must be an ability to try certain initiatives without 100% certainty that all of them are going to work 100%. Some will work very well; some will exceed expectations and others will not.
We think this amendment is absolutely critical to give Canadians the assurance that the government is willing to act as a willing partner in the types of initiatives that we see Canadians going out and doing on a daily basis, making the changes in their lifestyles in the way they consume energy or don't consume energy, in the types of choices they make in consumer products, in the types of demands they make of their own companies. We've seen this as a powerful pull upon government.
Canadians are far ahead of the politicians on this issue, Mr. Chair. We think this amendment pushes us in the right direction to establish national targets that are verifiable, that are accountable, that allow Canadians to judge whatever government of the day on our actions, on our ability to perform, and be that willing partner and an effective partner, and then rejoin the world community in this effort. As we've seen over the last number of years, Canada has slowly slid into this very narrow box represented by only a very few countries, and those are countries that are not doing their fair share.
If there's any country that has a vested interest in dealing with climate change, certainly it must be Canada. With the extensive north that we have, the extensive forest cover, and our deep reliance on natural resource extraction, it's incumbent upon us to make these types of changes and to have the courage of our convictions, Mr. Chair. Oftentimes we dance in the margins on this issue, without bringing forward the real changes we want to see. I think this is one of those changes that is absolutely imperative for us to address, and we need to be able to present with a certain amount of pride back to Canadians a piece of legislation that we know is the right thing. At the end of the day, we have to do the right thing. That's why we were all sent here.
So I move amendment NDP-15.1. I open it up to debate or questions. I think we should vote for it because it makes sense and it's what we've been told to do by the very best in the country.
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Can we take our places again, please?
We are back in session. I apologize for taking so long, but we had to go back 18 years with respect to the admissibility of a similar item. It's on page 898 in Marleau and Montpetit, under “Similar Items”:
In a 1989 ruling, Speaker Fraser clarified that for two or more items to be substantially the same, they must have the same purpose and they have to achieve their same purpose by the same means. Thus, there could be several bills addressing the same subject, but if their approaches to the issue are different, the Chair could deem them to be sufficiently distinct.
The question has arisen whether a private Member's bill which is similar to a government bill may be placed on the Order Paper and debated.
In this case, it's the other way around.
The authorities and past rulings show that there is nothing to prevent such similar items from being placed on the Order Paper simultaneously.
The private member's bill in question is a stand-alone piece of legislation. The amendment here is in a different bucket, if you will. It's in the context of a larger piece of legislation. In the chair's view, that makes it distinct and it can be debated.
Resuming debate, we'll go to Mr. Cullen.
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Perhaps a point of departure for the committee to debate this motion might be that if there are objections to the targets the NDP has put forward—specifically, 25% of 1990 levels by the year 2020, which is important, and a long-term target of 80% of 1990 levels by 2050—then I would be curious to know what other targets they're proposing. Do they want to seek an amendment to this or to perhaps make some other change? If there's another target, as a percentage of 1990 levels, that people seek to have, upon what evidence do the other members of the committee wish to base that target?
We very specifically looked to particularly the long-term target and said that this is what the science has been telling us about an overall two-degree warming, with us being perhaps beyond the tipping point once we go beyond two or three degrees. Particularly, the European Union has done extensive work, as has the UN. There is a doubling effect that happens, almost a multiplier effect. As the changes increase, it becomes more and more difficult to try to rein in overall temperature increases on the planet. This two-degree increase has been picked by Prime Minister Blair and others who are seriously fighting climate change, and this 80% target is directly linked to that two-degree rise.
I know the has some opinions. If committee members choose to deny this particular amendment's veracity, then what evidence are they using to suggest some other solution for Canada's particular problem that we're in right now?
We do agree with the science that says greenhouse gas emissions have increased dramatically, and that short-term, medium-term, and long-term targets are necessary. The short-term targets will be released by the government within weeks.
At this committee and in testimony received at other committees as part of the legislative review, we did hear that there were approximately 13 years of inaction from the previous Liberal government, which left us approximately 35% above the target. We did hear from the testimony, based on science, that these targets would have been good in 1998. It would have been good and possible to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions down to those targets if action had been taken. We did hear testimony, based on science, that it would be extremely difficult to meet those targets without destroying the economy.
Chair, I believe what is being suggested here in amendment NDP-15.1 is not based on science but on politics. I do agree that targets need to be set, in the short, medium, and long term. We need to work with our international partners to achieve substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. We need to set targets and achieve those targets. The targets have to be set on a realistic balance between a healthy environment and a healthy economy. But as I said earlier, I believe the targets that are before us are set politically and are not based on science. That's the testimony we heard. Unfortunately, there is rhetoric in this motion, NDP-15.1, and it's not based on science.
We want to have a clear action, an action that is based on achievable targets and that does reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It's easy for the opposition to set political targets. They're not in government. We don't have an analysis of what the costs and the impacts of these targets would be.
Within the amendments from the Liberals, they acknowledge that they would be putting people out of work and shutting down industry, and they've built in a transition fund. We want a healthy environment, we want a healthy economy, we want that balance, and we want targets set based on science, not politics.
Thank you.
I was just talking with some of the observers of this committee during our break. Some were encouraged by the committee's ability to work together to get something done.
I appreciate the parliamentary secretary's opinion that there may be other targets required, but to just blatantly suggest that these are not based on science, when that's contrary to the evidence that came forward—In terms of what is required, what is scientifically required to avoid dangerous climate change on this planet was put forward by a number of scientists.
I'll take up the one point he made. If they want to have a debate about a different target, then bring the numbers. We put down some numbers, as the NDP has done for a number of years now, to encourage the debate and allow other parties to come forward with their best suggestions. That was the very reason for forming this committee, to allow the best ideas forward.
I think the parliamentary secretary should resist the temptation to run back to this old argument that these are politically motivated targets. If he has science-based evidence to suggest that dangerous climate change can be avoided by setting another target of greenhouse gas reductions and he has someone he can refer to and say, “This is what the science is telling us is actually a more appropriate target”, then bring it forward. That's the debate we're trying to encourage here. But going into suggestions of political motivations to set a target that was told to us by scientists is wrong.
In terms of economic analysis, I think this is important, because one of the main criticisms by the Conservatives of the target initially set by Canada, of 6% below 1990 by the 2012 session, was the lack of economic analysis. To then watch this very same government, this week, as the minister came forward....
I remember in the previous week, when I asked what was the economic analysis done of their “feebate” program, their program to give incentives to some vehicles and not others, and which ones were on the list, the government hadn't even compiled a list of which cars were meant to be penalized or what the economic impacts for those cars that were manufactured in Canada might be. So there were absolutely no politics involved in making sure that two of the autos, made in the riding right adjacent to the finance minister's, both gas guzzlers, both now meant to go on some sort of fuel that exists only at one gas station in the entire country...to say that it was based on science or sound economic analysis is absolutely ridiculous.
So if the parliamentary secretary or the other members of the Conservative Party at this table wish to have sound economic analysis, then they certainly must bring in policies along the way that also pass that test, because so far, in the effort given by the feebate program, with not even a list that Canadians can refer to, to know which cars are going to be penalized and which cars are going to be encouraged, and then not to have any analysis of the penalties on those cars made in Canada or the minivans that people are looking to buy, which will be penalized by this program, as they take their kids to soccer practice....
It seems ridiculous to me to suggest that when looking at amendment NDP-15.1 there's rhetoric in this motion, that there's some sort of political motivation to the targets chosen. If the parliamentary secretary would like to debate targets, or if any members of this committee would like to suggest an alternative target, then bring that forward. But to simply rely on some sort of jingoistic phrase that these are motivated by political aspirations is wrong. It takes us down a very dangerous path. If this committee is actually looking to achieve something positive and constructive for the country, then let's have a substantive debate. Let's not move the debate into some realm of political motivation versus others.
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Thank you, Mr. Chair. I have a question for the member from Skeena—Bulkley Valley.
I've heard the science, and I have a science degree. Science is a very important aspect of all climate change, and I think of the environment generally, but is that the only premise he relies upon in making his argument? Canada is responsible for around 2%—and most people say a little less than 2%—of total GHG emissions. But most of the information we've received, including from the experts we received testimony from, suggested that to meet our Kyoto targets in the 2008-2012 commitment period, we would, in essence, have to shut down most of our industries.
Is he suggesting that we only rely on science to find the basis for these targets, or is he suggesting that we have a balanced approach, a balance with the environment, a balance with the economy, a balance with Canadian standards of living?
China, for instance, is responsible for somewhere in the neighbourhood of 15% of greenhouse gas emissions, and India is somewhere in the same area, but their increase in greenhouse gas emissions on a yearly basis is more than we will ever be able to cut out of our emissions. I'm not suggesting we have to make our decision on what China, India, or other developing countries do, but are we to use a balanced approach here?
I think we should have a general discussion in relation to this and on the targets themselves. Are we to use a balanced approach from what we heard in the testimony of many people?
We heard it could cost up to $80 billion to meet our Kyoto targets by 2012, which means in essence somewhere in the neighbourhood of $8,000 to $10,000 per household in Canada. Is that the intention of the member, that we meet the targets based on that and science only?
I just think we have to have a general discussion. This is a very important part of the legislation. I think it's important that we have short-term targets. This government has a mandate and will be coming forward with short-term targets in the near future. I understand the member's consideration and desire to get this out of the way, but in the past we had a Liberal government that didn't do anything for a long period of time, and now we're stuck, in essence, with a horrendous situation.
What I really want to know is, do we rely solely on science to find what we should reach? In my consideration of what you've said, we would then have to shut down everything. The lights should turn off in this place, the air conditioning should turn off, and we should not drive another motor vehicle or take another plane, train, or automobile anywhere in this country, if we are to meet our targets based on science.
So I would like to hear if there is a balanced mechanism in what he's suggesting.
I can appreciate Mr. Jean's question and comments. The argument that's being presented is one we've seen formulated by the current government for some time, that the economic sky is falling when Canada seeks to honour its Kyoto obligations.
To be very clear, there are three significant pieces to his question that are flawed in their argumentation.
One, in terms of the 2% contribution, that we should simply rely on what that contribution means to the overall impact of the world's contribution to climate change, the same argument is never used by the government when talking about the Afghan mission or Canada's contribution to world security, that while we're making a small contribution to the so-called war on terror in overall numbers, we still feel that contribution is important, that the government of the day sees that contribution of 2,500 soldiers to a force of some 200,000, when you combine most of the security missions, as significant.
Let's dismiss the notion, first and foremost, that because Canada contributes 2%, the motivation to do the serious things and make the hard decisions is not as strong as it should be. It is equally strong, regardless of whether you're in the United States or in Canada or in western Europe and encouraging the developing countries to come on.
Second, if you looked at proposed subsection 64.1(4), this is what we call the large polluters' target. This we deem to be fairness, because we heard from a lot of the industrial sector that when they assumed Canada was actually going to do something about its obligations under this climate change protocol, many of them started making the changes. Some of them chose not to. We deem it only to be fair that 6% below whatever the sector was producing in 1990 for those 2012 targets seems to be their fair share. It seems ridiculous that there is some notion floating out that the upstream oil and gas sector, for example, which is doing well profit-wise, would not also contribute to the solutions of some of the problems they're creating in the generation of that profit. That just seems to make sense to me, and to many others.
The fundamental question that Mr. Jean brings forward is the unhooking of the “economy versus the environment” debate that we must see ourselves past. We must. We simply can no longer, with any veracity, come forward to Canadians and say there's going to be a choice here and that it's one or the other. That argument has been broken down. We heard representation at this committee and others from other nations that have seized this issue, aggressively and with intelligence, and set hard targets for their big polluters and set meaningful changes in place through government policy to help bring their countries back into line on reducing greenhouse gas emissions while creating jobs.
We have to step beyond the rhetoric of this economic collapse when looking at the issue of climate change, because as he well knows—and hopefully he'll visit this summer up in Skeena—Bulkley Valley—the fishing industry, for example, is right now witnessing changes that they have never seen before. The economic impact of that environmental change is difficult to calculate. When the forestry sector estimates there just won't be a pine tree in British Columbia by 2050, how, exactly, do you give proper analysis and accounting for what that economic devastation will look like for logging communities all across Canada, never mind just British Columbia? When the mining sector has to shut down 30% of its travel days because the ice roads no longer form up, or their mines flood in areas where they've never received any significant rainfall, how do you...?
When you start to add up the economic cost of what's happening.... And this is why Sir Nicholas Stern came forward with his report—and he's not exactly a left-leaning economist. He said the effects of this incidence on our world economy—and this has an impact on Canada, I would suggest, more so than on other countries—is equivalent to the Great Depression and the First World War combined in terms of economic devastation.
We must decouple. We must remove the issues—as if there is one or the other presented to Canadians. I frankly don't think Canadians buy it, first of all, and second, I don't think it bears up under scrutiny. We have seen too many examples.
I will not dispute Mr. Jean's comment about our being late and about inaction from previous governments causing us to be in a pickle when it comes to our targets. The only one advantage that we have in the inaction and the delay and the dithering and all those things that we well know of from the previous government is that we've seen examples of what works in other nations. We've seen them try things, fail on some things, and have other things succeed, in terms of programs and policies that work.
The evidence is there in front of us. For this government, or any government, to choose not to base our new policies upon that evidence would just be foolhardy and arrogant, frankly. If you have evidence that's gone out before you on a national scale in other jurisdictions, in economies that are energy-based as well, and met with success in making sure they reduced their greenhouse gas emissions while encouraging economic growth....
I have one last point, Mr. Chair, on the national retrofit program that the NDP has been suggesting for a long time now. The total job creation of such a program in changing the national building codes in Canada and encouraging Canadians—and I mean through both taxes and financial incentives—to get on board and actually reduce the amount of energy they consume in their houses and their places of work—The actual economic multiplier of that is absolutely extraordinary, therefore completely debunking the myth that it's got to be one or the other. It's a false dichotomy. I just don't think that Canadians will hold the environment to ransom for some precluded Chicken Little scenario that we just believe is fundamentally false.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
I get the impression that we're launching into long political speeches. It's important during clause-by-clause consideration, but you'd think we were in the House of Commons.
The amendment tabled today by the NDP is important. First I'd like to divide this amendment in two as it deals with the discussions we had about reduction targets and compliance with the Kyoto Protocol, but also with medium and long term objectives.
I want to indicate to the committee that at first blush, we are in favour of the first part of amendment NDP-15.1, insofar as a bit further, namely in amendment BQ-10, we proposed similar targets. The actual debates on greenhouse emission objectives will inevitably have to be done in the framework of BQ-10. Of course we can broach the subject as we discuss NDP-15.1, given that it includes targets.
I would like to say to the government members that it is possible to achieve the Kyoto objectives. Europe has proven that it was possible to minimize the impact of the application of the Kyoto Protocol on our economies. It's a matter of implementing strong mechanisms as provided for in the protocol. I am thinking among other things of the credit exchange system and the carbon market.
Mr. Chairman, Europe has demonstrated that the Kyoto objectives could be achieved when the right instruments and the right approaches were put in place. Europe will attain its Kyoto objectives and the impact will be less than 0.1% of its GDP. That's proof that the objectives of Kyoto set for 2008-2012 can still be achieved and that we must go even further. Indeed, if one thing was clearly stated by our witnesses during the consideration of Bill C-30, it was that we cannot be satisfied with the long-term measures as proposed by the current government. That objective will be on the order of 60 to 80% by 2050.
Almost all the witnesses who appeared before this committee told us that we needed short, medium and long term objectives. We must therefore set that kind of objective. The NDP proposals, with regard to the first part of the amendment, are interesting ones and in any case they can be found a little later in amendment BQ-10.
I want to emphasize the fact that achieving Kyoto objectives and rigorous medium and long term objectives depends on the approach that Canada chooses. And that's why amendment NDP-15.1 is of some concern to me. What's been proposed here is more or less a sectorial approach, that is an approach based on industrial sectors. Yet, that has not produced significant results when it comes to attaining Kyoto objectives, simply because it does not take into account a number of parameters, among other things the energy positioning of one region compared to another. We can all agree that Quebec's energy position is not the same as that of Alberta and our industries don't necessarily use the same sources of energy. In Quebec, 90% of our electricity is produced hydraulically.
Moreover, the economic structure is not the same from coast to coast. One must acknowledge that in western Canada, the economy is based on fossil fuels. The auto industry is mainly concentrated in Ontario. The basis of the Quebec economy is the manufacturing industry. Given that the economic structure is not the same throughout Canada, we need an approach that takes that reality into account.
Moreover, demographics, gains in efficiency and the renewable energy potential are not the same everywhere.
Consequently, we cannot support an amendment which does not guarantee that the provinces which want to apply a territorial approach would not be able to do so. If these provinces give guarantees to Ottawa that they intend to respect the greenhouse gas reduction objectives of the Kyoto Protocol, this amendment, if adopted as worded, would not give them the possibility to apply their own, equivalent, plan.
Let me go back in time a bit and remind you of the debate surrounding Bill C-288. What did we say about the bill? We proposed an approach based on the objectives of the Kyoto Protocol. But let's think back to the NDP's position on Bill C-288's proposed territorial approach. Mr. Chairman, it took a lot of convincing before receiving the support of the Liberal Party of Canada, because the amendment which was proposed by the Bloc Québécois only proposed a single option, that is, the territorial approach.
Today, we are studying amendment NDP-15, and history might repeat itself. If we pass this amendment, we risk adopting a sectoral approach without receiving a guarantee from the NDP that provinces which respect, and which commit to upholding the Kyoto Protocol, will be able to take a territorial approach.
Even though my colleague, Mr. Cullen, showed more openness today than he did with regard to the proposed amendment contained in Bill C-288, and despite the fact that amendment NDP-15.1 integrates the objectives of the Kyoto Protocol and sets rigorous objectives which we will adhere to, we do not believe that the preferred approach will necessarily lead to reaching those objectives.
Thank you very much.
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One important piece—and this is going straight to 's concerns—was around addressing the short-term targets. The false debate that we can't allow to continue is that all action taken under Kyoto was meant to be taken domestically only. There was never any such negotiation under the protocol. Canada, the United States, Australia, and Europe all insisted that there be several tools in the toolbox for countries to achieve their targets, understanding that some of these changes are difficult to make.
There are two other significant options for the domestic targets in terms of doing them all in-house. One was the international credit option, which I know the Conservatives have an ideological opposition to but which other countries are successfully using. It fits in well with the clean development mechanism, and I believe it fits in well with Canada's long-term overseas development and strategic goals. It also combines well with the export of Canadian technology, which is how we use much of our overseas aid right now.
The government should be much more open than it has been to this point, and we've seen some movement from the . He was here only last week, and in scrumming with the press afterwards, he was claiming that he is open to the concept of CDM, open to the concept of this clean development mechanism.
The second thing is the application of missed targets to the second phase. This government and the have claimed that they will engage in the second phase vigorously, the second round of targets. Kyoto is partly designed and built so that you can encroach upon that second phase with more restrictive targets. If the government is truly serious about making these structural changes on the domestic front, this is one of the ways open to them.
The government simply can't, by its own decision, limit the options it chooses to use and then go back to Canadians and say it didn't have any options, that it only had this one and this option was too severe. It's a patently false argument to see several tools available and to just choose not to pick them up.
In terms of Mr. Bigras' point, it's well taken and understood on what was built into to give the government some options. The reason we have some conflict with the territoriality—and I've explained this in private, but I'll put it on the record—is that with certain things, particularly the carbon market that has been proposed in Montreal and in some suggestions from Toronto, when you don't take a sectoral approach, when you don't have a hard cap on particular industries, it becomes increasingly difficult to understand and figure out how the carbon market works. It's not as clear or clean.
We have also done some analysis showing that Quebec will do very well under the sectoral approach. As he pointed out, much of the energy produced and consumed in Quebec comes with very few greenhouse gas emissions. Much of the industry in Quebec, in manufacturing or some of the other sectors, will not be taking a significantly larger hit when you look at things sectorally.
I understand that there might be some ideological reasons and bases for the argument, but we've looked at both. If there's some language that you would like to suggest that would open up some options for government, we're seeking that type of consensus around the table. We're trying to find places where we can all agree. The fundamental point is that this option really does give clear accounting for Canadians. It does allow the government to put forward a plan and then be judged by that plan in a most public way.
As pointed out earlier, that was the thing most lacking under the previous government. It was very difficult to account for actions. Canadians were left wandering in the dark in terms of what was actually getting done, and the results were actually quite tragic and have become increasingly expensive.
Committee members must appreciate this. The longer we delay and put off the setting of those firm targets, allowing business and communities to respond, the more expensive this process gets, because we must do this thing. We absolutely must.
:
I needed to respond, Mr. Chair, to some things the NDP member said. I was quite surprised by some of it, because he sat on the same environment committee I did over the last three years and knows some of the things that have happened and taken place.
I know about the pine beetle, and there's no question that if the pine beetle had been taken care of 10 years ago, when the size of the infestation was only as large as Parliament Hill, it would have taken maybe $100,000—though I'm not sure how much. It took this Conservative government to invest $1 billion in that.
I know about Kyoto and that it reflects the countries responsible for approximately 30% of greenhouse gases in the world, whereas the G-8 plus 5 represents countries emitting 70% of greenhouse gas emissions. In fact, he mentioned the U.S. and Australia and why they signed on to the Kyoto Protocol. Well, they're not part of that protocol any more, for practical reasons. Europe is in a different position from Canada and a different position from the United States. They have an economy that collapsed in eastern Germany and as a result they were easily able to meet their commitments—and in fact have excess to sell to other countries such as Canada, which costs taxpayers in Canada tremendous amounts of money. That's why, I would suggest, Australia and the United States pulled out and joined the G-8 plus 5. It's because Europe was definitely a winner under Kyoto, and will be a winner under any of these targets he is suggesting today.
One consideration that's not been brought forward by the member.... I know he said that we shouldn't consider the economy at all, as greenhouse gases have gone too far—which I agree have gone too far—but I think we have to take into consideration the economy. We drive further in Canada than anyone else in the world; we have a colder climate than almost anywhere else in the world, and we are a primary producer. So we are distinctly different from Europe and other countries, which are easily going to meet the Kyoto Protocol. As well, they negotiated much better than we did at that point. I would suggest that most people who are aware of this know that. Indeed, Canada had much more stringent targets, but based upon our cold environment, our longer distances, and our being a primary producer, it was almost impossible to meet those targets—and we are being penalized.
We have heard from both sides on this issue, and I agree that we should lead, but we should also have considerations of what else is happening. We heard from experts on how much it's going to cost Canadians. We heard from experts on what we would have to do; in essence, what I heard is that we'd have to shut down our economy to meet those targets. That is a consideration I think government has to look at, because it is an issue of balance.
From what I heard from the member, in essence, the NDP is not worried at all about the economy and the economy should not be considered at all in this; it should just be based on science and the ramifications should, in essence, be dealt with by the Canadian taxpayer, as usual, based on bad decisions.
What I heard from the Bloc was in essence that it should be a territorial approach, because Quebec has hydro power, and that we shouldn't look at it as a country. Quebec certainly has advantages under that, because they're not the primary producer that other parts of the country are—and on which our economy, quite frankly, relies.
I understand why the Liberals want to move on, because they're ashamed of their record. Quite frankly, nothing was done for 10 years under the targets they imposed, so I understand why they want to move on and not talk about it, because it continuously brings up the fact that they did nothing even though they set their own targets.
I think we need to have this conversation and that we have to have a balance. As well, we have to have the discussion on what tools we're going to use and what balance we're going to have with these tools to affect the changes we want ultimately.
I agree with the member, but I have one final question, as I noticed he wants to raise his hand. Why is the NDP opposing a budget that brings forward such good things as fuel efficiency?
He talked about learning from examples. Europe has brought in fuel efficiency standards, and we brought those forward as a government, yet he's opposed to them. He's opposed to retrofits. He's opposed to this government's environmental plan. I don't understand why he says today that we should learn the lessons from around the world—which this government has done—and impose great new policies, and yet his party opposes the budget that brings in those great things.
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I appreciate the chair's sense of urgency. We have moved more than five motions to get the thing done. The only Liberal comment was to move on. I was hoping for a bit more substance from them on this, but that's okay.
On the question Mr. Jean raised in terms of the stringency of Canada's target and that we have to drive, well, we were driving a lot more than anybody else before 1990. We were producing a lot of oil and gas. We were doing many of the things we're doing now. If you start to look at where the places have changed—and he knows very well where the places have changed—we are actually consuming less heat than we were.
So let's get off what I think is a fundamentally useless debate of trying to backcast in time, saying that this happened and this happened. We know Canada's record on this to this point.
I'm sure the chair would avoid our getting into any kind of budget debate. I also know that what the government has brought forward in terms of means and measures is simply not enough. I know the government is hoping to bring forward its own timelines and targets, which will be intensity-based and will lead to further emissions increases in this country—guaranteed.
We think it goes back to the importance and the need for something like this. It gives people a certainty. People need certainty. The other types of targets are not. To suggest this economic collapse—I mean, that's ridiculous. It doesn't bear repeating or comment.
The propositions the NDP made in its climate change budget that was released more than two and a half years ago talked about the economic impacts and the positive reconstruction of the Canadian economy around the environment.
Ultimately, Mr. Chairman—and this is my last comment—we are trying to find the line on the budget sheet of businesses in Canada for where pollution goes. Right now it doesn't go anywhere. At some point it has to be accounted for. If it's not, then that's just irresponsible government.
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I just want to set the record straight on something, Mr. Chair.
I had the opportunity to review the report that I referenced, and actually Mr. Godfrey and other members of the committee and other people asked for a copy of the report. I was correct on the amount per household—approximately $10,000—that it would cost to implement Kyoto. The report does specify that it would cost up to $38 billion to implement Kyoto, but that was actually based on prior evidence. I know from speaking to some of the members of the committee that they heard the $90 billion figure too, so we're doing research on that.
I would be prepared, obviously, to provide that. The report is on IntraParl, but to any member of the committee who would like that report, as well as those who have already asked for it, I will provide it to you, and I will provide the additional evidence I found as well.
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This is a principle that we have long advocated for within the NDP, that when there are policy changes that happen within an industry that come from the federal government, there be some consideration of a transition fund or something that would be put in place to allow workers affected by those policy changes to transition into another form of work. This, obviously, draws upon the employment insurance fund, which has garnered more than $50 billion in excess over the last decade or so. It's certainly not a challenge of allocation of funds, because the funds are available and the funds are meant to do things like this.
While I appreciate your comments in terms of admissibility, we also know that we've seen the government start to talk about some similar measures, that there would be some transitioning. There has been a huge impact already in the auto sector, unrelated to government policy, in Canada right now. We've pushed for policies that would encourage investment in the Canadian auto sector, knowing that when we talk about the auto industry or when we talk about the large electrical power production or upstream oil and gas, there are transitions away from some of the more polluting industries into some of the cleaner industries, and some of those things will require investment in transition for families.
Two things that are interesting to know—and this has been raised in testimony that came forward from the Canadian Labour Congress—are, one, that the more efficient economy is a more work-intensive economy, a more labour-intensive economy where people are put to work; and two, the union that represents what has been a lightning rod for much of this debate, perhaps fairly or unfairly, the oil sands projects in northern Alberta, is one of the first unions that signed on to the endorsement of the Kyoto Protocol and the process of our meeting those targets.
When the workers directly impacted and affected by those very industries are looking for a more balanced approach to the environment and the economy, we think it's just responsible of government to put in place things like transition funds. So if you eventually do deem this out of order and we move on, then that's fine, but certainly we implore all the parties in the debate, and particularly, in this instance, the government, to see that these types of considerations need to be made—not the one-offs and half-offs, but an actual industrial strategy that allows people to transition out of those more polluting industries.
Part 1 of Bill does deal with amendments to the Canadian Environmental Protection Act. The amendment proposes a new section that gives the Governor in Council the authority to establish a greenhouse gas reduction transition fund to provide assistance in the form of grants to affected workers and communities.
The bill was referred to committee before second reading, which means there is more latitude in the amending process. The requirement that amendments must fall within the scope of the bill does not apply to bills referred before second reading. However, other rules of admissibility do apply. The rule against infringing on the financial initiative of the Crown is one of those.
You've heard this before. It's expressed on page 655 of Marleau and Montpetit:
An amendment must not offend the financial initiative of the Crown. An amendment is therefore inadmissible if it imposes a charge on the Public Treasury, or if it extends the objects or purposes or relaxes the conditions and qualifications as expressed in the Royal Recommendation.
The one referred to, referred to elements of a plan. In my view, this one refers to direct spending by the government. To me it's clear that by proposing to establish a new fund for the provision of grants, the amendment is increasing the charge on the Public Treasury and it would require a royal recommendation. Therefore, I find that the amendment infringes on the financial initiative of the Crown. On that basis I will rule it inadmissible.
Shall we move on?
We'll move on to amendment NDP-15.3.
Mr. Cullen, are you prepared to move NDP-15.3?
This amendment came directly from some witness testimony we had in terms of the principle of substitution that exists in other acts and bills within Parliament.
I'm very curious to hear what committee members think about bringing in that same principle of substitution.
This is something we often, very conversantly, use with toxics and the need for industry to look for substitutions, where those may be deemed suitable. There's a balance that says there should not be an inordinate economic burden placed upon the company in seeking that substitution. It's connected to some of the other things, and as I said, it's more familiar there.
We think there's some application to bringing that same principle in line with the concepts around climate change in this government's bill, and probably more specifically to the air quality aspects of Bill .
If there's a contaminant being released in Canada's atmosphere and it is affecting Canadians in a harmful way—which I know the government has claimed great concern over—then if there's a substitution available to that company, the company seeks to substitute it. It's one of those things where you catch the pollution before it even starts. It's much more cost-effective, rather then trying to catch it once it has been released out of the stack.
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We've been predominantly spending our time on the issues of climate change and target setting, but there are other issues within Bill —air quality, air contaminants, air pollution of different varieties—that have real health effects.
What we've seen is one of the most effective ways for government—and it's not often applied. That's part of the problem. Rather than waiting for Canadians to get sick because of a certain chemical that's being released, they seek substitutions. So a company has the onus when something is listed as toxic to seek out a substitution without even permitting it in its industrial process, thereby not having the negative health affects.
While a lot of our conversation has been on the effects of climate change and the targets, this talks about air pollution in the more traditional sense—that which is causing respiratory illnesses or any other illnesses that can be felt within the Canadian population, usually as a result of industrial processes.
The relevance is that the government has suggested some things to clean up the air. Well, this would go to the heart of it and prevent the pollution from even being released in the first place, because it's not used in the industrial process. The companies are given the onus. Rather than trying to catch up years later with various toxicology studies on Canadians and their health, this just seems like a more intelligent way to go.
I appreciate the intent of what Mr. Cullen has presented here. It seems quite extreme, though, and I don't think it's realistic.
In proposed subsection 68.1(1), they're asking for this to be amended to read:
68.1(1) Within five years after the coming into force of Canada's Clean Air Act, the Minister shall require an assessment of the following substances and an action plan for achieving their substitution:
(a) the substances listed in Schedule 1;
He's asking that we get rid of every substance in Schedule 1. I don't think that is even realistic.
My question for Mr. Moffet is, what would be the consequence of this being part of the Clean Air Act?
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This amendment would have very broad implications for the management of substances under CEPA. We have a number of concerns about the wording of the provision. First of all, the provision starts with “the Minister shall require”, so it's not clear who would be required to do the assessment.
It's also not clear to me whether there would be a requirement for an action plan for substitution for every one of these substances. If that's the intention, then you need to start going down the list. Every substance on schedule 1 has already been subjected to a detailed scientific assessment, so another assessment would be — If the assessment is intended to be of a scientific nature or of the risk posed by the substance, then I would suggest that it would be redundant.
Another concern I would like to raise to the committee is that, yes, each substance on schedule 1 has been assessed and has been determined to pose a risk to Canadians' health or to their environment. But that is not to suggest that it would necessarily be appropriate to eliminate every substance on schedule 1. Some substances on schedule 1 are naturally occurring and cannot be eliminated. Some substances on schedule 1 are used in commercial processes in a manner in which no release is possible. For example, they may be either used or created as transitional products and then taken out of the process.
The risk management analysis the government undertakes typically has to focus on where the risk actually manifests itself, and in some cases the risk is so broad that elimination and substitution is the appropriate solution. In other cases, there may be appropriate uses, or the environment or the human body may be able to tolerate certain loads, and therefore eliminating the substance would be overkill from a risk management perspective.
Another issue is that proposed paragraph 68.1(1)(c) refers to the government challenge, and it lists a new schedule 1.1, which I understand would be created through NDP-38. That amendment would list all the substances that have been identified by the government as substances that were identified as a result of the categorization exercise.
We need to be clear. That categorization exercise identified substances based on their intrinsic characteristics. We have put these substances in a challenge process because we're relatively confident that these substances pose concerns to human health and the environment and therefore require some type of risk management. The challenge exercise has been designed to give industry, users, and producers an opportunity to return to government and the public and explain how they're managing those substances. If they can convince government that the substance is being used or managed in a way that poses no risk, then the premise of the challenge program is that formal risk management would not be necessary. As I read this provision, that would preclude us from making that judgment and would simply require us to address each of these substances.
A final concern I would note is that it's not entirely clear what the phrase “slated for safe substitution” means. Does this refer back to the action plan, or does this refer to a conclusion that would be drawn from the assessment of the substances in proposed paragraphs (a) through (c)? A little bit more clarity may be required in order for us to provide further analysis. Let me stop there.
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I think we might be wasting time talking about the wrong thing.
I have two things.
In terms of the specifics and getting to the pollution talked about in Bill , we're willing to make that very clear and articulate that specifically in this amendment.
Second, we're not talking about eliminating these substances. The assessment that Mr. Moffet has made is correct. They have gone through a toxicology assessment, but they've never gone through a substitution assessment. It is important for committee members to realize that when we're looking at the ability to substitute something, there are a bunch of measures taken in. The predetermined conclusion is not that we're going to eliminate it; we're seeking to substitute it. We're chasing the wrong rabbit on this one.
If proposed paragraph 68.1(1)(c) is too broad and too extensive in terms of the Government of Canada's challenge to industry, then we're willing to remove it, but the concept of substitution to be built into this act when we're talking about air contaminants is actually quite important. It allows the government to do an assessment to ask if another substitution is available for this chemical. If there is, then the encouragement is to send industry down that path. If there is no substitution in existence—if it just doesn't exist—or if the substitution is deemed to be far too outside of the economic reach of the company, then it's also deemed not to be an option. But for heaven's sake, why, if we're talking about improving air quality for Canadians, wouldn't we seek a substitution analysis of the very chemicals we're talking about, rather than just saying there's a limit on the chemical you're producing? We know it's dangerous; we know it's harmful; that's the cap on what you can do. Why not ask the more fundamental question of whether there is anything else you can be using? Then you don't have to worry about a cap one way or the other.
Because I think there's some conversation going on, I'm going to suggest to the committee that we hold on this particular amendment and see if committee members want proposed paragraph 68.1(1)(c) out, and we're willing to do that. If they want a clear delineation of the scope of the chemicals we're talking about that relate directly to the Bill listing, that's fine, but don't toss the baby out with the bathwater on this one.
The concept of substitution is being used in REACH in Europe. It's being applied in many U.S. states. It puts us in line with many of our industrial competitors, and it's something we should consider.
Please do not confuse the concepts of substitution and elimination. This is not a game in which we go about trying to eliminate a whole series of chemicals willy-nilly; we're seeking out better alternatives to be used in the Canadian industrial process. That just seems intelligent to me.
:
Mr. Chair, I appreciate the intent of the amendment, but I'm wondering how relevant it is to the Clean Air Act, Bill .
We have the CEPA review. I would think it would be more appropriate to deal with this through the CEPA review. Unfortunately, we were supposed to be at the environment committee, which was supposed to be meeting right now doing the CEPA, but by decision of Mr. Cullen we are continuing here.
The question is whether it is appropriate to have this. We dealt previously with the Liberal motion trying to deal with the commissioner; now we're dealing with a CEPA review issue. To move forward, we need to make sure each topic is relevant, and I question whether this amendment is relevant to our discussions.
Could I have a ruling from you, Mr. Chair, on that?
I'm going to move this amendment briefly and then ask my colleague, Mr. Godfrey, to speak to it in more detail, Mr. Chair.
It is an amendment that we believe speaks to an incredibly creative approach to our climate change and greenhouse gas challenges.
Having so moved it, I would like, if I could, Mr. Chair, to turn it over to Mr. Godfrey.
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All right. This is key to a number of things that follow in our discussions: the creation of this entity, this independent agency, the green investment bank of Canada. Members will recall that Bloc motion BQ-6, which refers to an “independent body”, has referred to this particular entity. They have put in the green investment bank of Canada as being the independent entity because it went to some degree in recognizing the desire of the Bloc for a territorial approach. The point of this organization is to receive money from entities that emit excessive amounts of greenhouse gases. The purpose of that money is to be reinvested by those very companies in technologies that will reduce greenhouse gases. So every company that is in excess of its 1990 minus 6% target invests a portion of its funds into this account, with the idea that the money then gets reinvested in greenhouse gas emission reduction technologies.
We think that this, to some degree, follows the initiative of Premier Stelmach, who has introduced a similar linked concept of a target for large emitting entities. The money gathered for those entities that is in excess gets put into a technology fund. We're being very precise that the money is reserved for the first two years, for those companies to reinvest. As they reinvest they get the money out.
Furthermore, we have introduced the concept that if the companies do not spend that money, the money remains, by and large, in the territory where it was collected. So, again, there is a recognition of territoriality.
It is through this mechanism that we will be able to address in greater detail how we can start to move towards our targets that are outlined in subclause 21.(1).
We're quite careful about leaving the possibility that we could designate an existing body or that somehow a new body can be created. That is the object of the consultations with everybody we've set out. We do not mandate a particular form of this, but we think it handles the objections of industry that somehow by charging companies for exceeding their carbon budget, which we will get into in greater detail, they're being taxed. The idea is, it's really a directed reinvestment plan, and it's designed to expedite the reduction of greenhouse gases by major greenhouse gas emitters. We think this will set in place a dynamic, starting in 2008, that will change the course of emissions. We have tried to later on put in a price structure that will encourage companies to make those reinvestments, but not at a horrendous economic price.
So this is a very crucial part of what is to come in terms of the carbon budget strategy that follows. This is the entity that Monsieur Bigras referred to, and I will leave it there.
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Chair, we know that the Liberal plan was to send billions of dollars out of Canada to try to buy our way out of this environmental mess that they've left us, and we've heard even as recently as a few weeks ago that they were praising a $100 billion tax scheme to apply to Canadians.
Now what's being proposed here is the introduction of one of the largest corporate tax increases in recent history with no expectation of achieving any reductions in greenhouse gases. The Liberals' proposal of an uncapped investment account is nothing more than a carbon tax. They would like to disguise that carbon tax within the hidden language, but in fact it is a tax. With no cap, companies can buy their way out of achieving real reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. That's unacceptable. It renders their hard cap meaningless.
While the Liberal scheme for greenhouse gases is weak, their plan on air pollution is completely missing. Canadians witnessing increasing smog in their cities and struggling with respiratory illnesses such as asthma want a real plan. This is not in what's being proposed here. It's a tax. The leader, Mr. Dion, can talk all he wants about schemes, flip-flopping on the issues, but this is a tax that will not be good for Canada—billions of dollars of tax, a tax saying you can buy your way out and continue to pollute. That's not the solution. We need to have a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, a reduction in pollution, and this will not take us there.
The honourable parliamentary secretary exasperates me. The Conservative Party has so stretched the definition of tax over the years that it has become meaningless. About a year ago, the then opposition critic for the environment, who is now the chair of the environment committee, said we could not include greenhouse gases under CEPA and regulate them, because that would amount to a carbon tax, and now the government is proposing to use CEPA to regulate greenhouse gases in some obtuse manner.
This proposal is not for a carbon tax. I think we have to be clear about that. It is more akin to an eco-RRSP for large final emitters in this country. It is a fund that they can invest in and they can get the money back to invest in high-rate-of-return, energy-efficient projects. So I'd like to simply make that statement for the record.
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Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I think that we would support the first choice of the Liberal Party as far as this amendment is concerned, and may I remind you that this happened several amendments ago, namely yesterday. The point is to create an organization which is independent from the government, and which we have called the Green Investment Bank of Canada. In my opinion, this is the way to go.
Under this amendment, an independent organization would be created, and it would be responsible for negotiating and creating a fund which the major polluters, namely large industrial greenhouse gas producers, could pay into, and which they would then be able to access at a later date.
I don't see how the Conservative Party could oppose this type of amendment, since up to 80% of the money in the fund would be spent in the province the money was paid into. In my opinion, it is completely wrong to say that this is a tax. In fact, large industrial polluters, many of which are located in Alberta and in the rest of Canada, will be able to access this fund. In my opinion, it represents a contribution which large polluters will make to a fund from which money would be taken in the future to finance projects aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Of course, these projects would have to be approved by the independent organization.
I think this is the proper option. It is essential given the discussions we have had on the principles and the content of the Bloc Québécois amendment. Mr. Chairman, we will therefore support the Liberal amendment.
We've been looking at this for a while, and it's of interest if it leads to a polluter-pays principle. One of the fundamentals for us, particularly with the large final emitters, the large polluters in this country, is that a line item will appear in their accounting. They can account for wages, health benefits, and new investment in technologies, but at this point in our economic structure there's no accounting for pollution. There's a cost, and that cost is meant to be dispersed and the burden borne by society as a whole. That's not necessarily fair.
There's one question that was raised by some of the Conservative members, and I'd appreciate an answer from the Liberal movers. It's on the notion of whether this amendment would encourage and allow the creation of a cap and trade system. It's interesting that it came from the Conservatives because I haven't heard them endorse a cap and trade system yet. In order to have a cap and trade you need to have a cap. That means you need to have an absolute limit to what a company can produce, not an intensity-based limit, because that fluctuates. There's no real way to account for that under a cap and trade system; you need an absolute cap.
If the Conservatives have come on to that stream, I encourage it. So that question needs to be clarified for us.
There are two last things. The purpose of this committee was to bring forward new and substantive ideas to the challenge we face as a country around climate change—new ways to generate investment. It's important to us that companies going over their caps are able to draw down on these funds and make the investments right there domestically. The Conservatives, New Democrats, Liberals, and Bloc have all supported domestic investment. In order to spur that investment and encourage those changes we need to have both a carrot and a stick approach. That has worked for us in the past when making changes to our industrial group.
Finally, I'd like to move a friendly amendment that I think would have a greater and far-reaching impact on this. I'll read it into the record now if that's all right. We would add a portion to proposed paragraph 63.1(2)(h). I'll read it in its entirety and we can make copies available to you. It reads:
where funds are transferred out of the green investment account of a large industrial emitter into a green industrial fund, the mandatory expenditure by the agency of those funds for the purpose of furthering the progress of projects to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions in Canada,
This is the new portion:
a target of 50% of which will go into a building retrofit revolving fund program, the remaining 50% to be invested in the greenhouse gas reduction projects
Then it goes on:
with a minimum of 80% of the funds to be spent on projects in the province or territory in which the large industrial emitter is principally situated.
Then proposed subparagraph 63.1(2)(h)(i) would read:
Funds shall be allocated in a manner that maximizes verifiable GHG emission reductions.
First and foremost, this money goes to the companies that contributed to the fund. There's the two-year window in which they're allowed to draw down. Once that large polluter has decided to not access the funds—which would be a curious choice because it would be their money—a portion of them would go into this revolving fund.
This is a model that has been used successfully in conjunction with municipal and federal governments. The municipal green investment fund was one such version. The nature of the revolving fund is really important because it allows seed money to be created and the money to be generated over and over again and to have huge effects. The green municipal funds have been used time and time again to encourage projects that have helped communities right across this country. I suggest that communities in all of our ridings, even of members sitting around the table, have accessed such a revolving fund.
So the amendment we're moving would unleash a little more of the potential of what Canadians deem possible.
We have all heard petitions from various municipal councillors and just from Canadians working on this, that the access to funding for some of their progressive projects to reduce the burden on taxpayers—for example, on energy costs—is there and has been waiting in a holding pattern for too long. This would allow those projects to go ahead.
So I'd be curious as to how that would be deemed by the mover. If this would be deemed as a friendly amendment, perhaps we could go ahead and make that change.
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Let me take those in sequence.
Let me begin with the fact that we accept the NDP's friendly amendment.
Secondly, the question raised by about how this would fit in with a cap and trade system is answered to a degree in our amendment L-20, which anticipates the creation of a greenhouse gas emissions trading system. Obviously, by setting a price for the carbon budget, you are in effect putting in place a cap. It is anticipated in L-20 that a company may choose to participate in a carbon emissions scheme so that it reduces the amount of money it would have to invest in the green investment bank. In other words, the first thing it might wish to do is some domestic carbon trading or some domestic offsets. It's only after it has done that that it will move into the position where it might be liable to make some of these investments in the green investment bank.
Regarding the question about the two-year period, it is simply that during that two-year period the company would have to designate how it was proposing to spend the money on its investment. It would not have to have completed the investment or to necessarily have made the investment. It just has to say what it intends to allocate—I think the word is “allocate”—to an approved project.
asked about the 80%. Quite simply, the criticism has often been raised in various parts of the country that there would be a wholesale transfer of money from one part of the country, by whatever mechanism, to another part. We recognize that that was a valid criticism, and in order to allay that criticism, we would want money reinvested in the province of origin, in anticipation of the argument that one part of the country was financing the rest of the country. That would seem unfair to that part of the country. So we anticipated that.
The final argument was made by the parliamentary secretary, who described this as a “carbon tax” and a “tax grab” and “buying your way out”. I don't understand how the principle of what we're doing here varies in any way from what Premier Stelmach himself has proposed in the province of Alberta.
So every criticism you make of this plan, that makes of the plan, could equally be applied to Premier Stelmach. What we're talking about here is not the principle, but the degree. So I would caution him, in his criticism, to take that into consideration.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
:
There are two things. One is about a company's ability to draw down from that account. For some of these projects, in terms of reducing the amount of greenhouse gas emissions coming out of their site, there are two things. One is, we have long imagined that once the signals are sent, there will be broad sectoral approaches to these things. It's not going to be one company marching out alone while the other ones don't, because they'll all be working under the same rules, particularly if they're applied fairly.
To that point, there have been some, and we've heard from some of these companies already at this committee, who have done much of the legwork already in terms of research as to what's feasible, what types of measures cost what. And they've done much of the engineering. The reason we're comfortable with the two-year window is that in terms of launching those projects, there are feasibility studies, and the engineering beyond a two-year scope is not really required.
To do a feasibility study or an engineering scope on a project—Companies move at rates much quicker than this, and we've heard that. To simply design the project over a two-year concept window—If they're going much beyond that, their shareholders are going to have some questions for them. But that's for them to manage. There are companies that have been doing that without any signals put so far. They have been doing the engineering and designing and talking about things such as sequestration. There have been feasibility projects, and this government has made lots of laudable claims about just that project alone—how applicable sequestration is and what the costs per tonne are. A lot of that work's been done.
In terms of the bank being drawn on by other communities and there being a lag period, we very much imagine that the communities would be coming forward with concepts and projects that are already on their books. There probably isn't a municipality of any size in this country that does not have right now, at least in concept, if not already fleshed out in the development stage, projects they deem to be worthwhile for the environment in terms of greenhouse gas mitigation. We think there'd be an oversubscription to that particular portion.
In terms of companies' responses, the companies will always say the things take longer; they always will. This is not necessarily their responsibility. They're not in the business of reducing greenhouse gas emissions; it's not their job. Making this part of their job is what we think is incumbent upon government.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I am having a hard time understanding Mr. Jean's arguments. On the one hand, the western provinces, including Alberta, have guaranteed that there will be no transfer of money from one part of the country to the other. This very strong part of the Liberal motion should convince the representatives of some of the westernmost provinces. There is, therefore, a guarantee that these funds will be directly reinvested. Moreover, representatives of some of the large industrial sectors told us, during our hearings on Bill C-30, that the technology does exist, particularly for capturing and sequestration, but it will have to be funded.
This amendment would free up enough capital to provide for a rapid implementation of existing technologies. I trust the industry and large emitters to use their account to bring forward projects that will improve their efficiency in terms of greenhouse gas reduction.
If the large emitters don't come forward with a proposal, it is clear that these amounts will go directly to a fund that could be used to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. First, this proposal guarantees the large emitters the funding that will be available as long as they are proactive. Second, large industrial emitters, particularly in Alberta, will have a guarantee that they can keep the capital, which is required for investment. Third, we have to trust the large industrial sectors when it comes to the projects.
The first point was the provincial versus sectoral approach. Don't forget that what we're talking about is the residual, the amounts that would not have been invested or allocated or applied for within the first two years. Our frank anticipation is that any commercial entity worth its salt would have got its application in to get its money back, so it's not willingly going to surrender the money. So there will not be a large balance in the account.
Secondly, our view was—and again, I think Monsieur Bigras made the point very well in arguing for a territorial approach to the balance of the funds—it makes a lot of sense to avoid the perception that one part of the country is being drained for another.
I think in practical terms if, for whatever set of reasons, a company fails to take up its money, it may well be that another company in the same province in the same line of work will find better use for that money than the original company—which strikes me as something the board of directors of the surrendering company might want to address.
So I don't know that it's a real problem, but we were trying to deal with the perception that we were draining one part for the other.
The second point was, why not 100%? You reversed the argument and said why not 100%? You should remember that, in effect, we have moved somewhat in your direction with the NDP friendly amendment, which says that a target of 50% might be used for retrofitting projects and that retrofitting is not limited to the particular province where the source of the money comes from. So in some ways we have recognized Mr. Jean's point—perhaps not in a way you anticipated or wanted—that there is a way in which the money, should there be any in the account, after a two-year period could go across the country for retrofitting purposes, while still leaving the balance of that money, to the degree of 80%, to be reinvested in the territory.
And then on the final point, which has to do with four years versus two years, I have a couple of points. First of all, the number of large final emitters in this country is not limitless: there are 700 of them. It's not like Europe, where there were 11,000 and we didn't have good data. So we're actually in a fairly controlled universe of 700 entities that produce 50% of greenhouse gas emissions in the country.
Secondly, we think that any company worth its salt does have plans on the books to expedite or hurry along the investments that will reduce greenhouse gases.
I think what we're trying to do here through all of these amendments, particularly this one, is to create a sense of urgency. I would remind Mr. Jean that industrial companies, when they are put up against a real challenge, as in World War II, for example, when there was a shortage of artificial rubber because Malaysia had been captured.... At that time, we mandated a company called Polysar Corporation in Sarnia, Ontario, to develop artificial rubber from zero to 100, and they did it in 18 months.
So when Canadian companies are given that sense of mission and urgency, and the right kinds of financial incentives, as would be understood in the creation of a green investment bank of Canada, we think they are capable of moving beyond a leisurely pace to an urgent pace. We think the situation of climate change and the threat of global warming are such that this is a very good reason to be urgent—and two years will do fine.
It has been an interesting debate today on the Liberals' amendment, but the fact remains that the green investment bank would be a core element of the Liberals' proposed carbon budget, and a tax is a tax.
I just want to read into the record the history of the Liberals' position on a carbon tax. In June 2006, deputy leader—then Liberal leadership candidate—Michael Ignatieff said, “But we also have got to have popular, practical, believable policies that may involve some form of carbon tax.” That was on June 10, 2006.
Then a few months later, in September 2006, Stéphane Dion said—this is quoted from his release of September 5, 2006—on carbon markets versus carbon tax:
A carbon tax is less effective than a carbon market at reducing emissions. Some of my opponents for the Liberal leadership have suggested that a carbon tax would be the most effective measure to curb climate pollution. This is simply bad policy.
Then in February 2007 Mr. Dion “said he opposed the idea of a carbon tax”. That was on February 26, 2007.
On March 1, 2007, Mr. McGuinty is quoted in the Globe and Mail as saying—He took part in the news conference by Friends of the Earth, and he was quoted as praising the proposal. In the Globe and Mail of March 1, 2007, he says that “Every senior economist and expert who's appeared before the committee [that is studying climate change legislation] has spoken very much in favour of a carbon tax approach.” That was in the Globe and Mail of March 1, 2007.
The next day the Liberal leader, Stéphane Dion, was quoted in the Globe and Mail:
'We have a set of possibilities and it's a possibility," he told reporters when asked whether he is considering supporting such a tax.
Then four days later, regarding a carbon tax the Globe and Mail of March 6, 2007, said:
Liberal leader Stephane Dion will not call for a carbon tax when he releases his party's new environmental platform in the coming days. Mr. Dion's [spokesman]...insists the leader has been clear on this issue.
Yet what we have before us today is the mother of all carbon taxes. A tax is a tax. Our government is committed by mandatory regulation across all sectors of industry to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. What's being proposed here is a carbon tax—billions of dollars of tax, collected and yet achieving nothing.
The Liberal record on the environment, Mr. Chairman, after 13 years is 35% above the target. Canadians want action. They want reduced greenhouse gas emissions, and establishing a carbon tax across the industry does not require reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
It's not the way to go, and we don't support it, Mr. Chair.
I have just two small comments. I won't argue on behalf of the Liberals too hard on this one. It's just not in my nature, generally speaking; try as I might, it's difficult.
First of all, the notion of the carbon tax is something you have no choice but to pay, and the notion of collecting funds from those who choose to pollute beyond their caps is a choice being made.
Secondly, what we're encouraged by is that this is holding in trust the money that will then go back to the polluters themselves if they're able to design projects that would then mitigate the emission of greenhouse gas reduction. Those are two fundamental principles. If only we could have income taxes in this country that worked this way, where you simply had some relevance in choice as to whether you paid it or not. Then, if you did end up paying, you would have a two-year window from which to draw it back down to improve your own life or something else. It doesn't work that way in the nature of a conditional tax.
I see the chair is taking feverish notes.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh!
Mr. Nathan Cullen: The one important thing I want to say, though, is that as we approach the conversations of the substantive tools and measures we need to wrestle greenhouse gases under control in this country, almost to an amendment the government has tried to get them ruled out of order, has chosen to seek delay or to bring in notions of political rhetoric and these types of things. I'm getting disturbed by the trend. If what we want to do is to debate substantive choices—this cap over that cap, this target over that target, or this measure over that measure—then let's do that, but there's a disturbing trend that I would encourage the government members to avoid, which is to seek to rule out of order everything that would actually lead Canada to doing something about greenhouse gas emissions, or to seek to bring in notions of a political conspiracy or debate.
Let's talk about the substantive. That's why we suggested the creation of this committee in the first place; it was to debate policy, to debate options, and not to seek to throw wrenches into the works. So let's proceed in a more constructive way and have the courage to debate targets, hard caps, and measures that we think will get us to where Canada needs to be.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
It's a pleasure to speak to this amendment and to move it formally and take a few minutes to explain how this would connect to the previous amendment, which we've just passed, that spoke to the negotiations for the creation of a green investment bank, green investment accounts, and a green investment fund, as amended by the NDP.
This amendment does several things. It amends by providing that the Governor in Council can create, for example, a greenhouse gas emissions trading system that will require issuing and trading transferable carbon permits here in Canada by large industrial emitters, the same group referred to earlier by my colleague, Mr. Godfrey—roughly 700 large industrial emitters that are responsible for approximately 54% of all of Canada's greenhouse gases.
It also provides, Mr. Chair, for the creation of a domestic offset system, which of course talks about making sure that any transferable carbon credits that are traded are incremental and verifiable annual GHG reductions. They're linked, of course, to the notion of an individual carbon deficit of any single large industrial emitter.
We're also calling for a clear description of what person or classes of persons can actually own a carbon permit or a carbon credit—in other words, who can trade. We would be calling for the Governor in Council to set up the rules and the procedures for trading carbon permits or carbon credits.
Here, in proposed paragraph 94.1(2)(c), we would be doing something very important. We would be making sure that the greenhouse gas emissions trading system and the domestic offset system that we would like to see created in this country would be linked with international greenhouse gas emissions trading systems that establish incremental and verifiable greenhouse gas emissions reductions. These, of course, would have to be compliant with the Kyoto Protocol, as that, of course, would be amended from time to time. It speaks more directly to the two mechanisms inherent in the Kyoto Protocol, the first being joint implementation and the second being the clean development mechanism.
Here I think it's important to pause and remind ourselves of the overtures and the testimony given by the president of the Montreal Exchange and the president of the Toronto Stock Exchange, and in particular the 10-page memo that was sent to the government last December by the president of the Toronto Stock Exchange pleading with the government to not penalize Canadian companies by shutting them out of international carbon markets, thereby driving up the price of carbon for our Canadian large industrial final emitters and of course rendering the Canadian market an illiquid and small market with very high greenhouse gas carbon costs.
This amendment also goes further by prescribing the price for carbon in 2013 at an amount equal to or greater than $30 and of course giving flexibility to the government to take into consideration foreign and international greenhouse gas emissions trading systems. This will be important for us, Mr. Chair, as the European Union carbon markets take hold more formally on January 1, 2008, as the emerging carbon markets out of the United States hook up eventually to international markets, and so on.
This amendment also goes further to address some of the concerns raised on numerous occasions, particularly by government members, the , and the in his speech in Montreal just this week, because this amendment, under proposed paragraph 94.1(3)(a) prohibits the use of prescribed hot air credits to reduce the individual carbon deficit of large industrial emitters. So it ought to I think fully address the concern of the government. I cannot see how they could not support this, given that their opposition to international carbon markets has been chiefly, if not solely, predicated on the notion of what they describe as hot air purchases.
It also goes further by ensuring that at least until 2010, not more than 25% of the individual carbon deficit of a large industrial emitter is offset by using credits from foreign and international greenhouse gas emissions trading systems. This is again something we heard from some witnesses, but chiefly to ensure that the lion's share, by far, of investment made to reduce greenhouse gases stays right here at home. In fact, it really does provide the basis for a real made-in-Canada plan to deal with greenhouse gases.
And finally, and very importantly, in proposed subsection 94.1(4), it empowers the Governor in Council to make regulations to limit the quantity of carbon credits it issues, to ensure that the price of carbon is not less than $30 a tonne. This will be important as Canada does eventually continue to trade in the emerging and booming international carbon markets. It will be important for us to give the government flexibility to achieve an appropriate price by using allocation of the number of credits or the total number of credits in circulation in Canada, for example, to ensure that carbon price is never less than $30 a tonne on a CO2 equivalent basis.
So we can see that this is obviously very much connected to the previous amendment that we have just passed, or discussed and debated, and spoken to chiefly by my colleague, Mr. Godfrey. We believe it is the second piece of a new approach to immediately start on January 1, 2008, to achieve our greenhouse gas reduction targets, and we rule out the chief concerns of the government as manifested at this committee now over the last several months.
Those are my remarks.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I will try not to take as much time as the member who introduced the amendment.
This type of amendment has been a long time coming. Canadians have been waiting for an international greenhouse gas emissions trading system. Business people, environmentalists and investors have been anxious to have this type of system in place. The Montreal Stock Exchange has already signed a derivative products agreement with the Chicago Stock Exchange.
We have everything we need, and all of the stakeholders are ready to commit to a greenhouse gas emissions trading system. It is interesting to note that the motion ties the greenhouse gas emissions trading system to international systems as provided for in paragraph 94.1(2)(c). This would give our companies access to foreign markets. Already, Europe has estimated the potential of a future hot air credit market at $70 billion. This motion would allow our companies to have access to foreign markets while, at the same time, allowing us to meet our Kyoto objectives and as I said earlier, it would minimize the implementation costs.
The European estimate of the impact of applying Kyoto is 0.1%, precisely because the carbon market represents a powerful tool to meet the Kyoto objectives while minimizing the financial impact on the economy.
The government will probably also be happy with paragraph 94.1(3)(a), which would prohibit the use of hot air credits designated by the regulation to reduce individual carbon deficits of large industrial emitters. This week, when the minister appeared before the committee, he accused the opposition of wanting to buy foreign hot air credits. In my opinion, the amendment shows that it is not and has never been the intention of the opposition to use these hot air credits to reduce the carbon deficit.
Through this amendment, we will ensure that not more than 25% of the individual carbon deficit of a large industrial emitter is offset by using credits from foreign and international greenhouse gas emissions trading systems. So, through this amendment, large industrial emitters will have to put mechanisms in place to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions at source.
I think that this bank, where companies and large emitters can open an account, will ensure that companies will not have to go abroad to meet their carbon deficit requirements, but, from time to time, they will also have to ensure that they reduce greenhouse gas emissions at source, by, of course, using available technologies. The large industrial emitters told us that they didn't have the funding that they needed. So we are creating an account, or a fund, that they will be able to use to a limited extent, for the purposes of the carbon market, to deal with the carbon deficit, while ensuring that there will be reductions at the source.
:
I'm just wondering if the mover would take a friendly amendment in relation to this, and I'll go through the reasons why.
First of all, I did have an opportunity to meet with the Australian National Emissions Trading Taskforce, and they indicated at the time that they were considering the possibility of being very flexible in any legislation they put forward to allow other international agreements to link to their trading market.
I'm wondering about proposed paragraph 94.1(2)(c), speaking of politics, the Kyoto Protocol, etc. I'm certain that's why they put that in there. Instead of the specific reference to the Kyoto Protocol, which obviously limits our future ability to either change the legislation or to continue to include international agreements to which Canada is a signatory or that Canada has ratified...instead of the specific reference to that, which obviously limits our ability in the future to link with others.
Of course, we don't want to limit the application of this section, but I have a second question. Weren't the Liberals the $15-a-tonne government, with $15 a tonne being the amount industry was going to have to pay as a maximum and taxpayers footing the bill for anything more? Now we've moved to $30 a tonne. I'm just wondering if, two years from now, it's going to be $45 a tonne or $60 a tonne. Where did this number come from? As we know, the European market has traded from one extreme to the other, so I don't understand why they flip-flopped on this one, from $15 to $30.
So there are the two questions, first of all on the amendment and secondly on the number.
:
The concept and the need for an emissions trading regime is critical for the NDP, and I think for a lot of the witnesses we heard. There has been a growing move, even with some of the more slow-moving parts of our industrial sector, toward this as one of the options they seek to have.
There were some moments of irony, I suppose, when members from the oil and gas sector were asking for access to this market and didn't want to be limited. So you wonder who the holdouts are at the end of the day, who is actually left resisting a cap and trade system in emissions trading.
I think there's something important in this. The NDP first put two similar amendments forward for the creation of this. The Liberal one has come up first. We seem to be happy with it, although I have one pressing question.
There is the notion of being able to have a free-flowing market that can interchange. There has been much speculation in the United States and some other jurisdictions that are not yet involved in a cap and trade system about the ability to trade across boundaries that has to be built into the flexibility of the Canadian system, which we need to go beyond.
While I don't yet have clarity from the environment minister as to his openness to this—he seems to one day be open and perhaps the next day be not so favourable to it—the general momentum and trend within this conversation in Canada has been very much toward this option of allowing people to trade credits through a system designed in Montreal or somewhere else.
The one question I have for the mover of the motion is around the section prescribing persons or classes of persons that may or may not own a carbon permit or a carbon credit. There has been interest from some in the non-profit sector in gaining access to the market and taking a certain number of permits off the market, thereby not allowing the pollution to be emitted at any point. This is sort of the old buying a hectare of rainforest kind of thing, where for some other motivation people just wish the pollution not to be created in the first place.
I wonder if I can get a short answer from Mr. Godfrey or someone else on the team as to the acceptability of that. It's just not clear in the motion whether that would be available to individuals to take those permits off the market.
:
I think I have the answer to this.
The first thing to note is that the first category of persons is really the 700 large final emitters that are spelled out elsewhere.
However, if one goes back to proposed paragraph 94.1(1)(b), which prescribes the creation of the domestic offset system that includes the requirement for and the issuing and trading of transferrable carbon credits for incremental and verifiable annual greenhouse gas emissions reductions, those credits are beyond the 700 polluting entities and may come from a not-for-profit organization or municipality, but they are subject to a couple of constraints. First they have to be incremental and verifiable. Second—and this is in anticipation of one of the comments that was made earlier about the European system—the government may wish to make sure that in the total issuing of credits, it doesn't inadvertently flood the market, which is what happened in Europe.
So I think the answer to your question is yes, because of the offset provision, credits will not be issued to just any old entity or person. They will have to demonstrate that they are incremental and verifiable.
I hope that helps.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I know that the government seems to have reservations about the reference to the Kyoto Protocol, but I believe it is essential.
Mentioning a compliance with the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change—the UNFCCC—is essential, for two reasons. First, people at the Montreal Stock Exchange and other stakeholders in the emissions trading system have told us that the system Canada establishes will have to be compatible with other systems. The system compatibility issue is crucial in ensuring a viable carbon market in Canada.
As a result, insofar as the systems established so far have been founded on the joint application concept provided for in the Kyoto Protocol, that reference to the protocol is crucial to ensuring that Canada's future emission rights trading system is viable.
Second, the reference to the Kyoto Protocol is crucial in enabling us to trade credits internationally. You want those credits to be recognized. And for them to be recognized in the achievement of our environmental targets, the benchmark must be the Kyoto Protocol.
So, for both the above reasons—the need for systems compatibility to facilitate access by Canadian companies, and the issue of credits traded internationally being recognized in Canada's attainment of targets—the Kyoto Protocol and UNFCCC reference must be expressly set out. That is what amendment L-20 achieves.
I think the points made by are quite relevant. The scope that is being proposed here with the Liberal amendment is quite narrow, focusing at the 30%, saying that you play by our 30% rules and disregard the 70% of the polluters. I think that narrow scope is not the way to go.
I was quite surprised by some comments made by , unaware apparently.... Hopefully, he has read the Clean Air Act. Under clauses 29 and 33, it very clearly talks about carbon trading. It's on pages 28 and 29. So carbon trading has always been part of the Clean Air Act. The market should decide where that trade will occur. So it is already part of the Clean Air Act, and I don't support the Liberals' attempt to a very narrow scope. There would be no prohibition on the release of greenhouse gases without a permit, nor would there be any authority to create such a prohibition through regulation. I think what's being proposed in the Clean Air Act is a much better and larger scope and it's a better way to handle it.