Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Arctic Premiers Pleased With Vancouver Climate Talks

Darpan News Desk, 04 Mar, 2016 11:01 AM
    VANCOUVER — An agreement on climate change has changed the political climate for Canada's three northern territories as well.
     
    "Canada's northern and coastal regions are particularly vulnerable and disproportionately affected by the impacts of climate change," reads the Vancouver Declaration, signed by all 13 premiers and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
     
    It may not seem like much in a document that runs over 2,500 words, but for the leaders of Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut it was a big win. With a combined population less than half that of Saskatoon, they're not used to having their interests specifically mentioned.
     
    "I am pleased that Yukon and northern interests have been accommodated in our agreement today," beamed Yukon Premier Darrell Pasloski.
     
    "The provinces and territories agreed to work with the government of Canada to explore a number of solutions including looking at regionally appropriate carbon pricing mechanisms." 
     
    Regional flexibility was a refrain at Thursday's get-together, with each premier anxious to ensure the climate change achievements of their provinces were acknowledged. Saskatchewan fought to have its carbon capture and storage project recognized as a way to price carbon and New Brunswick insisted it should get credit for its hydro power investments.
     
    But the three northern premiers — Pasloski, the N.W.T's Bob McLeod and Nunavut's Peter Taptuna — made common cause and succeeded in getting the attention of their colleagues from larger jurisdictions.
     
    Several times, the declaration singles out the special needs and circumstances of Canada's Arctic and the people who live there.
     
    Again and again, provincial leaders stood in front of microphones and talked about the need for northern climate change investments, such as getting rid of the aging, polluting generators that power most Arctic communities with expensive, high-carbon diesel delivered over ice roads or by barges.
     
    A 2015 Senate committee concluded northern electricity systems are "aging, underperforming and at capacity."
     
    In Nunavut, 13 of the territory's 17 generators are at least 35 years old.
     
    Such facilities not only emit greenhouse gases, they are important sources of black carbon, or soot, that hastens the disappearance of snow cover and sea ice by darkening it so that it absorbs more of the sun's energy.
     
    They're expensive, too. Power costs are a significant component of the high northern cost of living.
     
    The Vancouver Declaration makes specific mention of those generators, promising early action on "clean energy solutions to help get indigenous, remote and northern communities off diesel."
     
    No wonder Pasloski and his territorial colleagues were pleased.
     
    "We need flexibility to combat climate change in a way that makes sense for Yukon and doesn’t impact our fragile northern economy,” he said. "We are already investing in building retrofits, biomass energy generation, hydro expansion and a range of other carbon reduction efforts."

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    High-Fat Diet Also Bad For Brain

    High-Fat Diet Also Bad For Brain
    A high-fat diet also appears to prompt normally bustling immune cells in our brain to become sedentary and start consuming the connections between our neurons, a new study has found.

    High-Fat Diet Also Bad For Brain

    Produce Used In Costco Chicken Salad Linked To E. Coli Is Undergoing Recall

    Produce Used In Costco Chicken Salad Linked To E. Coli Is Undergoing Recall
    SAN FRANCISCO — Federal officials say a business is recalling a vegetable mix believed to be the source of E.coli in Costco chicken salad that has been linked to an outbreak that has sickened 19 people in seven states.

    Produce Used In Costco Chicken Salad Linked To E. Coli Is Undergoing Recall

    10,000 Syrian Refugees To Be Resettled By Year's End, 15,000 More By February

    10,000 Syrian Refugees To Be Resettled By Year's End, 15,000 More By February
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government revealed Tuesday that its promise to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees will take longer and cost more than originally planned.

    10,000 Syrian Refugees To Be Resettled By Year's End, 15,000 More By February

    Aging Population Sparks Investor Interest In Health-Care Real Estate Assets

    As aging baby boomers fuel growing demand for health-care services, investors are increasingly turning their attention to medical office buildings — a niche within the real estate market that some argue is recession proof.

    Aging Population Sparks Investor Interest In Health-Care Real Estate Assets

    Born With No Voice & Low Survival Odds, 4-Year-Old Boy Talks With Voice Box Made Of His Own Tissue

    Born With No Voice & Low Survival Odds, 4-Year-Old Boy Talks With Voice Box Made Of His Own Tissue
    Grant Hasse was born with two very rare conditions — one that's usually fatal, the other that should have left him unable to talk.

    Born With No Voice & Low Survival Odds, 4-Year-Old Boy Talks With Voice Box Made Of His Own Tissue

    Indian-Origin Man's Firm Raises Funds For Diabetes Cure

    Indian-Origin Man's Firm Raises Funds For Diabetes Cure
    An Indian-origin man's company organised a diabetes awareness walk in Dubai and raised funds to support on-going research to cure the disease, a media report said here on Saturday.

    Indian-Origin Man's Firm Raises Funds For Diabetes Cure