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Ontario quietly revises its plan for hitting climate change targets | CBC News
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ONTARIO QUIETLY REVISES ITS PLAN FOR HITTING CLIMATE CHANGE TARGETS

Premier Doug Ford's government has quietly revised its plan to meet Ontario's
2030 targets for cutting carbon emissions.  


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PROVINCE 'COASTING' ON FEDERAL INITIATIVES TO CUT CARBON EMISSIONS, SAYS
GREENPEACE

Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Apr 17, 2022 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: April
17, 2022

Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announce $260
million in joint funding to help the Honda manufacturing plant in Alliston, Ont.
upgrade to build the 2023 CR-V and CR-V Hybrid vehicles. Ontario's new forecast
for hitting climate change targets no longer includes any reductions in carbon
emissions from greater use of electric or hybrid vehicles. (Chris Young/The
Canadian Press)
2750 2750
comments

Premier Doug Ford's government has quietly revised its plan to meet Ontario's
2030 targets for cutting carbon emissions. 

The new forecast for the province's greenhouse gas emissions posted to a
government website shows some significant departures from the reductions
earmarked in the "Made in Ontario Plan for the Environment" in 2018.

The new plan does not include any reductions from greater uptake of electric
vehicles, which accounted for nearly 15 per cent of the projected cuts to CO2
emissions in the government's 2018 plan. 

Also missing from the new forecast: any mention of the Ontario Carbon Trust,
which the government previously touted as a significant source of emissions
reductions. It was announced in 2018 as a $400-million fund to help the private
sector develop clean technologies, but never materialized. 

Natural gas conservation forecast in the 2018 plan to bring about a 2.3
megatonnes (MT) reduction of CO2 emissions has been shrunk to almost nothing in
the new plan: 0.03 MT     

Although the Ford government unveiled its 2018 environment plan with a splash,
it did not issue a news release about its new emissions forecast. CBC News asked
Environment Minister David Piccini for an interview in the days leading up to
the Easter long weekend, but he was not available.

 * Have questions about climate science, policy or politics? Email us:
   ask@cbc.ca


This is the Ford government's new forecast for how it expects to reduce
Ontario's greenhouse gas emissions by 2030. (Ontario Ministry of the
Environment, Conservation and Parks)

Despite the revisions, the new forecast still shows Ontario achieving a 30 per
cent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from 2005 levels by 2030.

"The province remains steadfast in its commitment to meet the 2030 emissions
reduction target and is confident in the plan and trajectory to get there," says
the new document. 

The revised forecast notes that Ontario has already achieved "greater reductions
of greenhouse gas emissions than any other province or territory in Canada." 

Those reductions came about almost entirely through initiatives from previous
Liberal governments — most notably ending Ontario's use of coal-fired
electricity generation. By the time the Ford government came to power in 2018,
the province was already two-thirds of the way toward meeting that 2030 target. 

The government may be helped along the way by the pandemic. Ontario's 2020
emissions showed the sharpest year-to-year drop since the 2008-09 recession
kneecapped the manufacturing industry: 16 MT lower than 2019, according to
federal figures released this week, in large part because of drivers commuting
less and travellers flying less.   



Ontario's new forecast predicts it will hit its 2030 target by reducing
emissions by 12 MT from current levels.

Those reductions would come primarily from three sources: 

 * Greater renewable content in gasoline.
 * Stricter emissions standards for heavy industry. 
 * The steel industry's planned shift away from coal-fired furnaces.

Keith Stewart, senior energy strategist with Greenpeace Canada, says the vast
bulk of the province's planned emission reductions are being driven either by
federal regulations or by programs that Ottawa is helping pay for. 

"The Ford government is basically coasting on previous actions taken by Ontario
governments and current actions being taken by the federal government," Stewart
said in an interview.

 * Canada saw a drop in greenhouse gas emissions during the first year of the
   pandemic: report

 * Ontario veering off track from its climate change targets, internal forecasts
   reveal

"Ontario seems to be saying, 'We will do whatever the federal government either
makes us do or pays for, and nothing more.' And that is not nearly good enough
in the face of a climate crisis," Stewart added. 

Ottawa's clean fuels mandate requires gasoline and diesel suppliers to reduce
the carbon intensity of fuel. Ontario is achieving that in large part by upping
the minimum ethanol content in gasoline to 15 per cent. 

According to figures the Environment Ministry provided to CBC News, the "green
steel" transition, funded in part by the federal and provincial governments, is
forecast to bring about a 5.1 MT reduction of emissions, while the gasoline
renewable content and heavy industry standards would combine for a 5.35 MT
reduction. The ministry did not provide a breakdown between those two
initiatives.


This graphic shows the greenhouse gas emission reductions the Ford government
forecast back in 2018 in its Plan for the Environment. (Ontario Ministry of the
Environment, Conservation and Parks)

There are far smaller emissions reductions forecast from less food waste dumped
in landfills (0.97 MT) greater use of transit (0.58 MT) and conservation of
natural gas (0.03MT). 

The government's plan is working, said Piccini's press secretary Phillip
Robinson said in an email to CBC News. 

"This has been done while ensuring that our approach is flexible to the
opportunities, needs, and circumstances facing job creators and not harmful to
Ontario's economic growth," Robinson wrote. 

The three-page document laying out Ontario's new plan for emission reductions
doesn't mention climate change, something that Stewart says is telling. 

 * Ford government eyes 'green steel' as way to catch up on cutting carbon
   emissions

"This plan is about meeting federal requirements, not addressing the climate
crisis, because the Ford government doesn't recognize it as a crisis," he said. 

The Trudeau government unveiled a plan last month for a 40 per cent reduction in
Canada's emissions from the 2005 benchmark. However, Ontario is sticking with
the 30 per cent target, which Canada committed to under the legally
binding Paris Agreement in 2016. 

 * Ontario's plan to sell 'clean energy' credits doesn't wash with environmental
   groups

Dianne Saxe, the Green Party of Ontario's deputy leader, says the government's
forecast has no credibility.

"It hides even more details than the groundless numbers in the last Ford
forecast," said Saxe in a news release. 

"Doug Ford is doing nothing on the climate emergency," she added. 

"To do nothing on the greatest issue of our time is an insult to our children
and future generations."

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