ADAM OLSEN – To start ... a few months later ... shortly after that ... then we got ... then this Summer ... and just last week. We talk a lot about the environment
Bill 38, the Climate Change Accountability Amendment Act (2019),
strengthens the responsibility of the provincial government to take action on
reducing emissions and addressing climate change.
It is important that government is accountable because trust us
is not good climate policy.
The Bill establishes the requirements for government to ... set interim and
sectoral targets, table an annual report on the progress of our emissions
reduction, reduce the time for publishing data, and establish an independent
advisory committee to advise the Minister.
In my second reading response to the Bill, I highlight why setting these
accountabilities law is important. And, I cast forward to what it will be like
living in a low-carbon, low-emissions society. I pause for a moment on the
opportunity we have to build for British Columbia a sustainable economy, safer
more secure communities, and resilient well-functioning eco-systems that
increase the quality of life for everyone.
Bill 38 is a foundation for what comes next.
[Transcript]
I'm grateful to stand for second reading of the Climate Change
Accountability Amendment Act, 2019. As my colleague has stated in his remarks
previously, climate change rhetoric is nothing without transparent, accurate,
timely and publicly accessible data. Political promises are worthless without
legislated accountability. "Trust us" is not good climate policy.
I'm proud the BC Green caucus has been able to contribute to the
development of this legislation in such a fundamental way. It is my sincere
hope that the transparency and accountability mechanisms in this bill, if
passed, will last well beyond this minority government and set an
evidence-based foundation from which all future climate policy can be built.
The main components of Bill 38 are requirements for government to set
interim targets, sectoral targets and to table an annual report to the
Legislature to detail our emissions reduction progress. The annual reports will
outline the latest emissions data and projections as well as actions planned
for future years and the effect that they're expected to have.
It will also include a determination of the climate risks our province
is facing, along with the risk reduction policies and any mitigation or
adaptation plans.
It also legislates the establishment of an independent advisory
committee. The committee will be made up of members from diverse areas of
expertise and regions of the province and can provide advice to the minister on
policies that can lead to further reductions, progress towards targets,
opportunities for sustainable economic development, opportunities for climate
mitigation and adaptation, among other matters related to the act.
Lastly, this bill gives government the ability to set more detailed
targets and other environmental standards for publicly owned buildings and
vehicle fleets to help reduce emissions, improve environmental performance,
save money and support innovation.
The Climate Change Accountability Act, as currently written, already
includes legislated greenhouse gas reduction targets -- as well as a
requirement to collect data for tracking emissions. But our targets are set ten
years apart, and data is published on a two-year delay.
Combine that with the four-year government mandate, and you create a
situation where political parties spend the first two years blaming their
predecessors for bad results, and the next two years saying that they're just
getting started ... while making promises that they can only fulfil if you vote
them back in. Then, before you know it, the ten-year target is within sight,
but by that time it's too late to substantively change our emissions trajectory.
Bill 38 claims to cut through those excuses by shortening the time scale
... and increasing transparency.
To situate Bill 38 in the broader climate context, I would like to bring
to the chamber's attention some of the reports that have been published in the
last year. I appreciate that my colleague has done the same, but I think it
warrants repeating.
To start, there was the 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) special report, in which the world's leading
climate scientists warned there are only a dozen years for global warming to be
kept to a maximum of 1.5 degrees Celsius, beyond which even a half degree will
significantly worsen the risks of drought, floods, extreme heat and poverty for
hundreds of millions of people.
A few months later, Canada's Changing Climate was
published by the federal government. The report noted that northern Canada is
warming at twice the global rate and highlighted BC as being particularly
vulnerable to drought, glacial loss, severe wildfires and sea level rise, which
will salinate farmland.
Shortly after that, we had the report from the United Nations
Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem
Services, which stated in stark terms that we are in the midst of an extinction
crisis, with a million species likely disappearing within decades, the
consequences of which would be devastating for ecosystem stability and food
production.
Then we got the report from the United Nations special
rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights. Professor Alston said the world
is on course for "climate apartheid," where the rich will buy their
way out of the worst effects of global warming and the poor will suffer. "Even
under the best-case scenario," he wrote, "hundreds of millions
will face food insecurity, forced migration, disease and death…. Staying the
course will be disastrous for the global economy and put vast numbers into
poverty," he wrote.
Then this summer, the province quietly released their strategic
climate risk analysis for British Columbia. In it, severe wildfires, seasonal water
shortages and heatwaves were the three highest-ranked risks facing the province
in terms of severity, magnitude and likelihood. Ocean acidification,
glacier-mass loss and long-term water shortages also were on the list.
And just last week, the climate transparency analysis of G20 nations
found that Canada is in the top three countries furthest off track from meeting
their emissions reductions targets. Our per-capita emissions are 18.9 tonnes.
The G20 average is 7.5 tonnes. Not an illustrious list to be on.
We talk a lot about being environmentally conscious in British Columbia
and Canada. The data tells a different story about who we are and how we are.
We are managing to zero as we jump from crisis to crisis, so consumed by
triaging that we fail to pause and consider what is causing these crises in the
first place.
What is the state of governance in the fossil fuel era?
It's a political economy so intertwined with industry that the rules
have evolved to favour those who stand to gain the most, where a government
that should be protecting its people cringes in the corner when multinational
corporations level empty threats.
It's about good governance. It is the politics of accommodation. It
pivots on threats of competitiveness, bends to meet the demands of fossil fuel
interests and is willing to sacrifice all else for profit.
It is a system that relies on narrowly defined cost-benefit analysis
that discredits ecological value and dismisses cultural well-being. When you
consider the true costs of expanding the fossil fuel sector in the face of a
growing climate crisis, only those who stand to profit or those who have been
made to feel there is no other option could possibly feel it is a worthwhile
endeavour.
Consider for a moment a simple local example.
According to the provincial and federal governments' analysis of the
most severe climate change risks facing British Columbia, the quality and
quantity of fresh water is on trend to be the most pressing. We know fresh
water is quite literally essential for human life, ecosystems and agriculture.
We know that mimicking natural filtration systems with staggeringly expensive
water treatment facilities makes our population less resilient and more
vulnerable, not to mention the other plants and animals it leaves with
unhealthy water. Yet this government continues to approve unsustainable logging
practices that put our watersheds and water supplies at further risks, beyond
the challenges that climate change will bring.
Only if you are using an incomplete analysis can the value of fibre
justify the costs to the local community and ecosystem. Peachland, with a
population of 5,500, for example, must now spend $25 million on a water
treatment plant. The Comox Valley is on the hook for a $125 million plant. Just
because we don't account for the other costs doesn't mean we don't have to pay
for them.
Adding further insult to injury, this year every member of government
and every member of the official opposition voted in favour of massively
expanding the fossil fuel industry in British Columbia, offering them hundreds
of millions, possibly billions in subsidies to further tip the equation in
their favour.
While we superheat our environment, 82 members in this place offered a
golden handshake in grotesque corporate welfare.
I wonder what our children and grandchildren will think when they look
back on this year and realize that in the face of all the evidence to the
contrary, this government decided: "Yeah, now is the time to massively
increase fracking in British Columbia. Let's take more of that precious fresh
water, mix it with chemicals and push it underground. What's more, let's target
that fracking in some of the most fertile land in the province and flood a huge
portion of it to power the whole operation."
Oh, and don't worry about the earthquakes. You know what the industry
says about that? They say those were going to happen anyway.
Who pays for those unaccounted costs?
Well of course, we do. The people do. First Nations, commercial
fishermen, hunters ... they're already paying for the missing salmon and
wildlife.
Communities will pay for it every time they have to rebuild after a fire
or flood. The 2017- 2018 forest fire season cost us $1.2 billion. Most of all,
it's our youth who pay for it. Major flooding in the Fraser delta as is
expected with the increasing sea level rise could cost us up to $30 billion.
Are we planning for that? Have we thought about that?
Despite what the entrenched incumbent players will have you believe; it
does not have to be this way. Actually, I don't think it can be this way. We
can't afford it.
Luckily, we are fortunate enough to live in one of the best locations on
the planet from which to navigate the climate-related challenges ahead. We have
access to boundless renewable energy, fibre and water, like no other
jurisdiction in the world. We have incredible potential to create renewable
energy and sustainable forestry sectors to support our economy and feed
innovation.
Transitioning to a carbon-neutral world
doesn't mean going back to the Dark Ages. It means transitioning to a cleaner,
sustainable society, where economic, social and environmental concerns are
central in our decision-making. They actually inform our decision-making. They
actually are not scoffed at.
It is exciting to think about what a carbon-neutral society would look
like day to day, as we went about our busy lives.
To start, it would be quiet and clean. Cities would be designed for
walking, cycling, electric public transit and electric cars. There would be
less traffic, less smog. Our homes would be more comfortable, bright, warm and
dry in the winter and cool in the summer. We'd have less plastic and garbage,
and our communities would be no longer strewn with litter.
With more trees planted and natural spaces conserved to absorb carbon
and filter water, we'd have fresh air and the songs of birds on our way to
work. The salmon would come back, maybe the bees too. Sustainable agriculture
would provide local, healthy food grown on farms that sequester carbon in the
soil and use less pesticides. Sure, we might eat less meat, but by trading
factory-farm beef for cattle raised locally using slower, sustainable practices
that regenerate the land, it would taste better. And it wouldn't be loaded with
antibiotics.
With less air pollution and more active transportation, we'd feel
healthier. There'd be more interconnected communities and less fear over a
climate catastrophe. We'd actually feel happier. We have so much to gain.
It's not just possible that the transition to a clean economy would
create jobs; it's actually inevitable — jobs that are inspired, important and
valuable. This shift can be the vehicle to deliver a more just, equitable and
healthy society. What I'm describing is not an impossible utopia. Every example
listed is grounded in current economic trends, scientific evidence and already
established best practice.
Through the Green caucus's work with the government on CleanBC and the
amendments included in this bill, we have created the conditions for this
change. To fully realize these possibilities, we need to start planning beyond
the next election cycle. We need to focus on building a new economy that works
for us all, not just the privileged few.
That's what Bill 38 is about. It's the foundation for what is next.
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