OTTAWA: Canada's Conservative
government, shifting positions in the wake of Barack Obama's election as US
president, said on Wednesday that it would work to develop a North America-wide
cap-and-trade system to limit emissions of greenhouse gases.
The
Conservatives, who walked away from the Kyoto protocol on climate change after
taking power in 2006, have until now focused on cutting the intensity of
emissions rather than imposing outright curbs.
"We will work with the
provincial governments and our partners to develop and implement a North
America-wide cap-and-trade system for greenhouse gases," the government said as
it unveiled plans for the new session of Parliament.
Obama favors
much tougher greenhouse gas reduction targets than those set by the
Conservatives, and says he will start a cap-and-trade
system.
Environment Minister Jim Prentice told reporters that
Canada's policy in part reflected Obama's election.
Green groups said
the Conservatives' new positioning is largely academic as Canada would likely go
along with whatever approach the new US administration takes because the US
economy is around 10 times the size of Canada's.
"I think we will be
forced into a North American-wide cap-and-trade system that will basically be
dictated by Washington.... It's the only system that can work. We've got an
integrated economy," said Stephen Hazell, executive director of Sierra Club
Canada.
The Conservatives' approach to climate change to date has
been much closer to that of President George W. Bush.
The Kyoto
protocol committed Canada to cutting emissions by 6% from 1990 levels by 2012, a
target the Conservatives say is totally unrealistic.
Last year Ottawa
released a plan calling for a 20% cut in 2007 emissions by 2020. This compares
with Obama's much more stringent target of cutting emissions to 1990 levels by
2020.
Last week, Prentice said a US cap-and-trade system could
coexist with a Canadian approach of targeting emissions intensity.
"I
think the Canadian government is just trying to con the Canadian public into
believing that it's going to do something about climate change," said John
Bennett, chief spokesman for the Green Party.
He said Canadian and US
environmentalists would "make very clear to the US administration that it's
apples and oranges" when it comes to comparing both plans.
Although
Canada is the single largest supplier of energy to the United States, Obama's
team has expressed reservations about US imports of oil from the oil sands in
the western province of Alberta.
The process of removing oil from the
sands produces vast amounts of emissions.
Alberta -- the bedrock of
the Conservative party -- strongly opposes the idea of a cap-and-trade system,
and Ottawa's plan was quickly attacked by provincial Premier Ed Stelmach as too
risky.
"We've just come through the world's worst financial crisis
where people were not telling the truth about the risk ... who's thinking here?"
said Stelmach, complaining that Alberta was not told in advance about the
announcement.
Stelmach said the province would continue to pursue its
own plans that focus on efforts to capture carbon emissions and store them
underground.
Ottawa also said it would set an objective that 90% of
electricity needs by 2020 be met "by non-emitting sources such as hydro,
nuclear, clean coal or wind power."
It also said it would reduce
various regulatory barriers to make it easier to build natural gas pipelines
into the Arctic, which has rich reserves.