Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Provinces, Feds Meet To Find Path To Better Plastics-Recycling Plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jun, 2019 12:08 AM

    OTTAWA — The federal government and the provinces are expected to announce plans to work on harmonizing recycling standards following a meeting of environment ministers in Halifax today.

     

    Environment Minister Catherine McKenna will sit down at a table with her provincial counterparts where it is hoped the tense dispute over carbon taxes can be shelved long enough to reach some agreements on plastics.


    Five of the provinces at the table are challenging or plan to challenge Ottawa in court over its "backstop" carbon tax, and a decision in Ontario's case is coming Friday.


    McKenna acknowledged the challenges she has with provincial governments over climate change policies, but she said the hope is for movement on plans on both plastic standards and producer responsibility.


    "Canadians expect progress on this issue," she said.


    The fact they are meeting face-to-face at all might be progress. Last fall the group was to meet in person in Ottawa to discuss plastic pollution but that meeting was first downgraded to a video chat and eventually just a phone call. While officials chalked it up to scheduling conflicts, behind the scenes it was said that the carbon-tax disagreements between Ottawa and many provinces was to blame.


    During that call the provinces and Ottawa agreed to work toward cutting Canada's waste in half by 2040 and trying to eliminate plastic as a source of garbage altogether. Today's meeting is aimed at putting the action in that action plan, including finding ways to make it easier to recycle plastics to begin with, as well as requiring producers of plastic to be responsible for ensuring their products get recycled.


    Much of the responsibility for plastics standards and producer responsibility lies with provincial governments.


    Canada only recycles about nine per cent of the plastic it produces. According to a recent report prepared for Environment Canada by Deloitte and ChemInfo Services, in 2016 Canadians threw out 3.3 million tonnes of plastic, 12 times more than was recycled.


    "A nine-per-cent recycling rate is abysmal," McKenna said, ahead of the meeting.


    There are a limited number of recycling facilities in Canada, and a lack of standards for plastic packaging makes it difficult to recycle many items. Different dyes or glues used in labels can make recycling impossible, for example.


    The Deloitte report also mentioned that it is still cheaper and easier to produce and use new plastic than it is to recycle and use recycled plastics. The report recommended setting standards to require packaging materials and other products to use a set amount of recycled material to create new demand that would propel growth in the domestic recycling industry.


    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced earlier this month that Canada was looking at banning a number of single-use plastic items within the next two years, including Styrofoam take-out containers, plastic straws and cutlery.


    The products that will be banned won't be determined until the Canadian Environmental Protection Act review process is completed.


    But environment groups aren't certain the provinces or Ottawa are getting a strong enough message about the need to reduce plastics to begin with. A number of environment organizations plan to "roll out a plastic carpet" outside the ministers' meeting Thursday, using some of the 113 kilograms of plastic waste collected in Halifax Harbour on June 15.


    Sarah King, head of the oceans and plastic program at Greenpeace Canada, said there is not enough focus in provincial-federal talks about stopping the use of plastics altogether. She said the focus is still mostly on what to do with plastics when people are done with them, rather than finding new ways to deliver products to people and eliminating the single-use mentality consumers currently have.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    39-Yr-Old Richmond Woman And Her American Husband Among Six Killed In Alaska Crash

    Friends and colleagues are mourning a Metro Vancouver couple who were active in the region's booming technology industry before their lives were cut short in a float plane crash in Alaska.

    39-Yr-Old Richmond Woman And Her American Husband Among Six Killed In Alaska Crash

    Spark Foundation: Investing in our Youth

    Through various Spark programs, students engage with individuals who have dedicated their lives to giving back, set aside their wealth to benefit others and invested in the future of their communities.

    Spark Foundation: Investing in our Youth

    Tanya Tagaq, Joshua Whitehead Among Finalists For Indigenous Voices Awards

    Tanya Tagaq, Joshua Whitehead Among Finalists For Indigenous Voices Awards
    VANCOUVER — The Indigenous Voices Awards are building on their inaugural success as a launching pad for Indigenous literary talent with a fresh crop of finalists, an organizer says.    

    Tanya Tagaq, Joshua Whitehead Among Finalists For Indigenous Voices Awards

    Push For Fresh, Local Hospital Food Across Canada Over 'Pitiful' Alternatives

    Push For Fresh, Local Hospital Food Across Canada Over 'Pitiful' Alternatives
    The recipes are among dozens that have been developed by 26 people, including food-service managers, chefs and dieticians who were offered two-year fellowships at hospitals from British Columbia to Newfoundland and Labrador as part of a campaign called Nourish Health.

    Push For Fresh, Local Hospital Food Across Canada Over 'Pitiful' Alternatives

    Abbotsford Police Court Plan To Deal With Repeat Offenders, Property Crime Down Over 12%

    Abbotsford Police Court Plan To Deal With Repeat Offenders, Property Crime Down Over 12%
    Between January 1 and April 30th, 2019, 509 crimes against persons (including assaults, homicides and robberies) were reported to the Abbotsford Police Department. 

    Abbotsford Police Court Plan To Deal With Repeat Offenders, Property Crime Down Over 12%

    Delta Police Caution Public About Replica Guns

    Delta Police Caution Public About Replica Guns
    Officers were called to a bus stop in Tsawwassen this week after reports from the public of seeing two men with what appeared to be a gun. Police determined which bus the men boarded, and then intercepted the men leaving the bus in Ladner.

    Delta Police Caution Public About Replica Guns