mike watkins dot ca : Harper: Inaction on Climate Change

Harper: Inaction on Climate Change

This is the year of climate-change awareness, and politicians all over the globe are coming to recognize that their futures will in large part be decided by how they are perceived as acting on this issue.

Harper has so far been able to deflect much of the attention away from his own party's shortcomings - which are real and substantial - on the file. Yet the climate-change issue remains Stephen Harper's Achilles heel.

The Past

Fenced in by history on one side, and his support base on the other, Harper has no room to wiggle on policy even if he wanted to.

But the “battle of Kyoto” is just beginning. Ratification is merely symbolic; Kyoto will not take effect unless and until it is implemented by legislation. We will go to the wall to stop that legislation... Stephen Harper, 2002

Harper has for years championed the cause of the climate-change denial machine, an engine driven by big oil and big business. Confidants and supporters include noted climate-change denier Dr. Barry Gordon and his ineptly-named Friends of Science group, and Gwyn Morgan, former CEO of EnCana, the country's largest independent oil and gas company. Morgan too is a long-time foe of Kyoto, as well as a supporter of the Conservative Party. Unsurprisingly, Morgan was one of Harper's first appointment choices after becoming Prime Minister.

It is my earnest submission that signing the Kyoto Protocol would go down in history as one of the most damaging international agreements ever signed by a Canadian Prime Minister. Gwyn Morgan, former CEO EnCana Corp

In 2002 Harper, then Opposition Leader in the House of Commons, was squaring off daily against former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien. Kyoto, deeply unpopular (as are all things Liberal) in Alberta, wrote a fund raising appeal letter (attached) to tens of thousands of his Canadian Alliance party members. In it Harper said that Kyoto was nothing more than a socialist scheme, and, in lock-step with the organized denial machine, called climate change science tentative and contradictory while ridiculously suggesting that carbon dioxide (one of only many greenhouse gasses) shouldn't be a target for reduction because it "is essential to life". [1]

There is of course nothing tentative or contradictory about climate-change, despite the denial machine's attempt to blur reality, much in the same way that tobacco company executives used to testify that smoking was safe. Implanting doubt in the minds of Canadians - for we do try to be fair people - is an age-old technique of propagandists and marketers alike.

The Present

Riding to a minority election win in part on the coattails of Western angst over Kyoto, Harper delivers presents to the climate-change denial machine lobby. Immediately Harper's intentions are signaled as the inept, Alberta oil industry connected, Rona Ambrose - Ralph Klein's own Kyoto fighter - is appointed environment minister figurehead. With Ambrose fed to the press as a distraction, Harper proceeds with his long-stated plan to sabotage any real action on climate change. He said he'd scrap Kyoto [2] and he has.

Several months after the 2006 election, COMPAS completed a poll of business leaders for BDO Dunwoody (PDF attached) which underscores a truism that business is generally behind Harper in his crusade to abandon the mandatory GHG cuts that the Kyoto agreement calls for.

By a margin of at least 2:1, the COMPAS panel of CEOs and business leaders embraces the Asia-Pacific Partnership over the Kyoto treaty.

Why is business behind the so-called Asia-Pacific Partnership? Because it won't force them to change. Period.

The Bush nuclear program would turn Canada into an international radioactive waste dump. Greenpeace

In the late summer of 2007 we were treated to a photo-op of the APP ringleaders - Australia Prime Minister John Howard, U.S. President George Bush, Prime Minister Stephen Harper - and other world GHG producers agreeing to nothing more than aspirational targets, a euphamism for no hard targets, no limits, no penalties and no curbing of GHG emissions growth. Bucking the party line, John Howard's own minister of environment has been quoted as saying that an aspirational target is not a real target.

Canada has essentially operated under voluntary industry aspirational targets for two decades now, and the result: our emissions are way up.

Understandably, environmentalists are not happy with the direction Canada is headed.

In the face of environmental calamity, we have political cowardice. John Bennett, executive director of ClimateforChange.ca

[Our] new federal government seems bothered not a whit by such details. Instead, it has said that the Kyoto targets are too hard for Canada, so it won't even try to meet them - essentially thumbing its nose at the international community and the other Kyoto signatories (the majority of whom have already reached their targets or are on track to meet them by the 2012 deadline). David Suzuki [3]

Intertwined with rising GHG emissions are the rising expectations of the global nuclear industry, of which Canada, Australia, and the United States are major players. Canada and Australia have together a large percentage of the planet's Uranium reserves.

GNEP promotes the export of uranium and nuclear reactors, along with the return of the radioactive waste (spent reactor fuel) to the supplier countries for disposal and reprocessing. Canada, however, has a long-standing policy against repatriation of radioactive waste from uranium and CANDU reactors sold abroad.

“The Bush nuclear program would turn Canada into an international radioactive waste dump, and the Harper government has not allowed any public debate,” said Dave Martin, energy co-ordinator for Greenpeace Canada. [4]

Election 2006 should have been the environment election, but was instead focussed on the infighting between Liberals and the ineptness of Paul Martin's election team.

The Future

The next time Canadians head for the polls to elect any government - municipal, provincial, or federal, lets not allow politicians to spin other less important issues as distractions.

Stephen Harper's bunch truly are in bed with the large polluters and producers of GHG's; the Liberals have demonstrated over many years that they lack the political will, or capital, to make tough, meaningful, choices.

There are no easy answers to the dual problems of climate change and clean, sufficient, energy; but our current and traditional political leaders aren't even interested in asking the right questions. Its time to put motivated and un-beholden people into our House of Commons, our provincial legislatures, and city halls.

[1]Harper letter called Kyoto 'socialist scheme', January 30 2007 (The Star)
[2]Conservative government would scrap Kyoto: Harper, June 9 2004 (CBC)
[3]Canada's international reputation in jeopardy, May 19 2006 (Suzuki)
[4]Harper, Howard and Bush: The axis of dirty energy, September 6, 2007 (Greenpeace)
ca-2002-antikyoto.txt (file missing, text/plain)
Fund raising and support appeal letter from Stephen Harper to tens of thousands of Canadian Alliance members, 2002
29May06-Asia-PacificPartnership.pdf (file missing, application/pdf)
BDO Dunwoody CEO/Business Leader Poll by COMPAS, May 29 2006