Canada
dead last in ranking for environmental protection
Canada
has fallen behind in a global ranking on international development
initiatives and ranks last when it comes to environmental protection.
18
November, 2013
The
Washington-based Center for Global Development assesses 27 wealthy
nations annually on their commitment to seven areas that impact the
world’s poor. Canada came 13th in this year’s survey, which will
be released Monday. Denmark led the list, followed by Sweden and
Norway, with Japan and South Korea at the bottom.
The
rankings are based on the center’s “commitment to development
index”, or CDI, which tracks each country’s performance in
foreign aid, openness to trade, policies that encourage investment,
openness to migration, environmental protection, promoting security
and supporting technology creation. The countries were chosen because
they are all members of an OECD group involved in aid and development
measures. Countries such as Russia, China, India and Brazil are not
included in the survey because they are not members of the OECD
group.
Canada
dropped from 12th place last year and did far worse in the
environmental protection category, where it ranked 27th. Every other
country made progress in this area except Canada, the centre said in
a report on the rankings.
Canada
“has the dubious honor of being the only CDI country with an
environment score which has gone down since we first calculated the
CDI [in 2003],” the report said. “This reflects rising fossil
fuel production and its withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol, the
world’s only treaty governing the emissions of heat-trapping
gasses. Canada has dropped below the U.S. into bottom place on the
environment component.”
Owen
Barder, a senior fellow at the centre who prepared the index, said in
an interview that the environment category has become one of the
bright spots in the survey. “Environment is the one part of our
index that has really seen improvement and Canada has been the only
country that’s fallen,” he said. “My expectation would have
been that Canada is environmentally friendly, Canadians all seem to
take the environment seriously.”
The
major reasons for Canada’s poor showing, he said, were pulling out
of the Kyoto Protocol and having one of the highest levels of
greenhouse gas production per capita. Canada also has low gasoline
taxes, which don’t encourage conservation, and high subsidies for
fishing, which impacts fish stocks. Slovakia and Hungary came first
and second in the environment category mainly because both have some
of the highest gas taxes among the 27 nations and the lowest
greenhouse gas emissions.
Canada
scored best in trade and migration, where it finished fourth and
third respectively. On trade, the centre cited Canada’s low tariffs
on agricultural imports as helping poorer nations. And on migration
the centre said Canada is among the leaders in welcoming immigrants
and students from developing countries.
Over
all, Mr. Barder said this year’s survey demonstrated that not much
has changed in the last decade in terms of international development.
“We, the rich countries, have been making promises [at Group of 20
meetings] to pursue development-friendly policies and our index
doesn’t pick up very much evidence that things have changed,” he
said. “And you would expect to see that. So this is a dog that
didn’t bark story. This dog should be barking by now and it’s
not.”
He
added that the environment has been a notable exception mainly
because of the extraordinary compliance with the 1987 Montreal
protocol on reducing chemicals that damage the ozone. The compliance
rate has exceeded 98 per cent and many countries in Europe have gone
beyond the protocol’s requirements.
“What
we’ve seen is actual follow through and give credit where credit is
due,” he said. “It has actually been implemented.”
He
added that despite the overall lack of progress on development issues
there is room for optimism. “The optimistic part is that within
these different policy areas there are some really good countries
doing really good things. And that seems to be politically viable for
those countries and it doesn’t seem to cause them any economic or
social harm,” he said. “It does make you think that there is
considerable room for improvement in a politically viable way.”
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