Canada will not agree to include language calling for the phaseout of all fossil fuels in final agreement at this year\u0027s UN climate talks.
The agreement from the UN conference in Scotland last year called for countries to move faster to get rid of coal-fired electricity plants that are not abated with technology to capture emissions.From our newsroom to your inbox at noon, the latest headlines, stories, opinion and photos from the Toronto Sun.By clicking on the sign up button you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc.
Canada backed the coal language last year, but Guilbeault says it cannot get behind adding oil and gas. He says the federal government does not have jurisdiction over natural resources and backing the language could risk a lawsuit from the provinces that Ottawa could not win.
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Little to celebrate so far from Canada’s COP27 attendanceIt’s week two of the United Nations’ 27th Climate Change Conference, also known as COP27, and so far, there have been few positives to remark upon from the Canadian delegation led by Environment and Climate Change Minister Steven Guilbeault. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stayed home for the first week of the global gathering that began on Nov. 6, before heading east on Nov. 11 to attend the ASEAN summit in Cambodia and then onto the G20 Summit in Indonesia. He’ll head to Thailand for an APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting on Nov. 18—the last day of COP27—before flying to Tunisia for La Francophonie. Canada has its first-ever pavilion at this year’s COP summit, and along with Parliamentarians and public servants, its delegation includes Indigenous and youth delegates from the north. But the Canada Pavilion also features oil-and-gas industry representatives, including from the Pathways Alliance—part of an overall trend of increased industry presence at the global summit, with reportedly more than 600 fossil-fuel lobbyists registered to attend, up 25 per cent from last year’s COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland. Guilbeault met with American climate envoy John Kerry on Nov. 10 to tout collaboration between the U.S. and Canada on reducing methane emissions from oil-and-gas operators. The same day, Guilbeault’s department pushed the progress metre an inch forward by publishing a proposed framework outlining its new methane regulations, with draft regulations expected early next year (Canada committed to reduce methane emissions from the oil-and-gas industry by 75 per cent below 2012 levels by 2030 in October 2021.) Aside from highlighting previous commitments (or new details of already announced funding), Guilbeault has also spoken in favour of having an “open and frank conversation about loss and damage”—regarding a push, backed by a number of African nations, for richer countries to help pay the bill for climate-related damage. Germany, Belgium, Scotland, and Denmark, meanwhile, ha
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