The Alberta tar sands industry, for years the source of extreme environmental damage and fierce critical outrage for its contribution to global warming, on Sunday was served an enormous blow when Premier Rachel Notley announced a historic new climate change strategy.
“People slowed the beast again but this time we did it at the source,” wrote Mike Hudema, Greenpeace Canada’s climate and energy campaigner, celebrating the news.
The plan—which calls for a tax on carbon, a cap on tar sands emissions, a phasing out of coal-fired electricity, and a move to renewable wind-generated power—represents a significant shift for a province that “has spent so long on the wrong side of climate action,” environmentalists said.
“This is the day we step up, at long last, to one of the world’s biggest problems—the pollution that is causing climate change,” Notley declared during a Sunday press conference in Edmonton. “This is the day we stop denying there is an issue.”
While the plan has some significant shortcomings—and notably has been endorsed by the tar sands industry—campaigners say that by taking the lead on emissions policy, Notley is paving the way for newly elected Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to take the more aggressive stance needed at the upcoming United Nations COP21 summit in Paris.
“Alberta just leapfrogged the Government of Canada on climate ambition, and Prime Minister Trudeau should use this announcement to move forward a plan to truly meet our obligations to a 2ºC world,” Cameron Fenton, Canadian tar sands organizer with 350.org, said following the announcement. According to Fenton, such a policy would include freezing tar sands expansion altogether, scrapping “unnecessary pipeline projects,” and committing to a “justice-based clean energy economy.”
The announcement was made one day before Notley joined Trudeau and Canada’s other premiers in Ottawa to discuss the country’s climate strategy ahead of the Paris talks.
Canada’s environmental record has for nearly a decade been crippled by the policies of recently ousted Prime Minister Stephen Harper. And although environmentalists celebrated his departure, it remains unclear what sort of leader Trudeau will be on climate.
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