Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada makes small emissions cut in 2023, but must ramp up to hit key targets: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Sep, 2024 09:39 AM
  • Canada makes small emissions cut in 2023, but must ramp up to hit key targets: report

Hikes to oil production and rebounding air travel put a drag on Canada's climate progress last year, a report published Thursday by a leading policy institute found, though the country was still able to make a modest cut to its planet-warming emissions.

The new estimates from the Canadian Climate Institute show Canada cut emissions by about 0.8 cent last year compared to 2022, or eight per cent since 2005. 

But the report said the country will need to speed up that progress if it hopes to hit its 2030 target to cut emissions by 40 to 45 per cent compared to 2005 levels. 

"Sustained policy effort in the electricity sector demonstrate that significant progress is achievable, but other sectors need to follow suit and accelerate their momentum to keep Canada on track," it said.

Industrial carbon pricing and coal phaseouts were cited as two policies helping to drive the electricity sector's decarbonization efforts, with emissions falling 6.2 per cent year-over-year, or 62 per cent since 2005. 

"What we've been able to do in electricity is nothing short of astounding, and it continues in this year's estimate," said Dave Sawyer, the institute's principal economist. 

Emissions from buildings also dropped six per cent, the report said, largely attributable to lower natural gas heating demands during Canada's warmest winter on record. 

The entire year was also the second warmest on record in Canada and the warmest globally, driven by climate change and boosted by El Niño conditions.

Of the eight major sectors, the report said transport saw the biggest annual increase, rising by about 1.6 per cent, driven by a major rebound in domestic aviation. 

Oil and gas continued to hold back Canada's progress, continuing its long-standing trend of annual emissions increases. Sector emissions were up about one per cent over 2022 or 12 per cent since 2005, driven by higher production.

The sector now accounts for just under a third of the country's total emissions. 

“Once again, progress in Canada’s emissions reductions is starkly different across sectors," said Canadian Climate Institute president Rick Smith. 

"Governments right across the country need to accelerate developing policy and strengthen measures already in place, like electrification and industrial carbon pricing systems.”

The early estimates don’t offer a look at what policies are driving emissions progress. Yet, a previous report, published by the institute in March, suggested industrial carbon pricing had the biggest impact, and could help drive up to nearly half of Canada's climate-policy driven emissions cuts by 2030. 

That same report found the consumer carbon price was responsible for about eight to 14 per cent of expected emissions reductions. 

The institute's early estimates are intended to offer a high-level snapshot of emissions trends before Canada releases its official inventory report next spring, a requirement under United Nations climate pacts. The independent early estimates are based in part on annual Statistics Canada data on production, demand and demographic activity.

While a growing population and economy helped drive up emissions, it was more than offset by climate policy and changing markets, the report said, including from clean energy advances. 

Yet, the report noted the uptake in clean energy is still off pace. While electricity emissions are way down, the demand for electricity has not significantly increased, suggesting a slow electrification switch. 

“We're seeing electricity flat, demand flat, in fact, and so most of the reductions are coming from fuel switching – coal to gas, for example. So, fossil to fossil,” said Sawyer, the economist. 

“This is an indicator we're going to be watching more closely.”  

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Ottawa calls $8-million price tag for animal captivity bill speculative, premature

Ottawa calls $8-million price tag for animal captivity bill speculative, premature
The estimated costs are largely associated with building and administering a new data system to keep track of the animals. Right now, there are 23 elephants and about 30 gorillas, chimpanzees and orangutans. The federal government called the conclusion speculative, noting it is based on legislation that hasn't even passed yet. 

Ottawa calls $8-million price tag for animal captivity bill speculative, premature

Fight brewing at CRTC over first Online News Act payment by Google

Fight brewing at CRTC over first Online News Act payment by Google
A new fight is playing out at the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission over the first $100-million annual payment Google agreed to pay Canadian news outlets.  The Canadian Journalism Collective, the group tasked by Google to distribute the money to news outlets, has submitted plans for its governance structure to the CRTC. 

Fight brewing at CRTC over first Online News Act payment by Google

B.C. judge refuses cash award to claimant who takes part in 'underground economy'

B.C. judge refuses cash award to claimant who takes part in 'underground economy'
A provincial court judge in Surrey has thrown out a small claims case between a lumber company and a fence building firm over an "unlawful scheme" between the two to avoid paying GST and PST.  The principal of Top Quality Lumber Ltd., Amarjit Dhaliwal, told the court in June that H & R Fencing owed his company almost $21,000, but H & R's owner said it was closer to $4,000 in unpaid bills. 

B.C. judge refuses cash award to claimant who takes part in 'underground economy'

B.C. wildfires holding steady at about 350 with lightning in the forecast

B.C. wildfires holding steady at about 350 with lightning in the forecast
A statement from the First Nation outside Vernon on Thursday says BC Wildfire Service personnel were working to maintain guards around the seven-square-kilometre Hullcar Mountain blaze while helicopters douse it with water. The blaze is one of nine wildfires of note in the province, meaning the fires are either highly visible or pose a threat to public safety and infrastructure.

B.C. wildfires holding steady at about 350 with lightning in the forecast

B.C. appoints new chief coroner, while overdose health emergency lingers

B.C. appoints new chief coroner, while overdose health emergency lingers
The British Columbia government has appointed Dr. Jatinder Baidwan as the province's new chief coroner following the retirement of Lisa Lapointe earlier this year. The Ministry of Public Safety says in a statement that Baidwan takes on the role after serving as the chief medical officer for the BC Coroners Service since 2017.

B.C. appoints new chief coroner, while overdose health emergency lingers

Assault on hijab wearing woman

Assault on hijab wearing woman
Police in Metro Vancouver say they're investigating an assault on a woman wearing a hijab as a possible hate crime. New Westminster Police say they received a report of an assault inside a fast-food restaurant at about 10 o'clock Sunday night.

Assault on hijab wearing woman