Look
out, John Key! You’re in danger on being left behind!
Who was it that threw climate change action under the bus at Copenhagen in 2009?
The
world's worst climate change villains? Step forward, prime ministers
of Australia and Canada
These two world leaders are laughing while the world burns up - and they don't look like stopping any time soon.
These two world leaders are laughing while the world burns up - and they don't look like stopping any time soon.
21
October, 2014
Canada
once had a shot at being the world's leader on climate change. Back
in 2002, America's northern neighbours had ratified the Kyoto
Protocol,
the world's first treaty that required nations to cut their emissions
or face penalties. In 2005, the country hosted an international
climate change conference in Montreal, where then-prime minister Paul
Martin singled out America for its indifference. "To the
reticent nations, including the United States, I say this: There is
such a thing as a global conscience," Martin said.
Australia,
too, was briefly a success story. The government ratified Kyoto in
2007 and delivered on promises to pass a tax on carbon by 2011. The
prime minister that year, Julia Gillard, noted her administration's
priorities to set "Australia on the path to a high-skill,
low-carbon future or [leave] our economy to decay into a rusting,
industrial museum".
Today,
the two countries are outliers again - for all the wrong reasons.
According
to a 2014
Climate Change Performance Index from
European groups Climate Action Network Europe and Germanwatch, Canada
and Australia occupy the bottom two spots among all 34 countries in
the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
Among the 20 countries with the largest economies (G20), only Saudi
Arabia ranked lower than them. Canada and Australia's records on
climate change have gotten so bad, they've become the go-to examples
for Republicans, like Senate
minority leader Mitch McConnell, who
don't think climate change exists.
How
did these two nations go from leading the fight against climate
change to denying that it even exists?
On
the way to his first trip in the US, Australian prime minister Tony
Abbott stopped for a full day of talks with Canada prime minister
Stephen Harper in June. The Sydney
Morning Herald reported
that Abbott was in Canada's capital with the intention of building a
"conservative alliance among 'like-minded' countries" to
try to dismantle global efforts on climate change. At a press
conference that day, Harper applauded Abbott's efforts to gut
Australia's carbon tax. "You’ve used this international
platform to encourage our counterparts in the major economies and
beyond to boost economic growth, to lower taxes when possible and to
eliminate harmful ones, most notably the job-killing carbon tax,"
Harper said. He added that "we shouldn't clobber the economy"
by pursuing an emissions trading scheme or a carbon tax.
This
is how Canada and Australia's top leaders frame global warming. The
two stress that they will always choose short-term economic gain
first, disregarding scientific findings and even the interests of
their political allies in the process.The countries' abrupt shift on
climate track conservatives' rise to a majority in Canada in 2011 and
in Australia last year.
In
just a few years, conservatives have delivered blow after blow to the
nations' environmental progress. Canada withdrew from Kyoto in 2011
to avoid paying expensive penalties for failing to meet its promise
to cut carbon 6 percent over 1990 levels (Canada's emissions had
risen by
nearly 30 per cent).
Harper offered a less ambitious target instead, one that mirrored the
US's commitment cut 17 per cent of carbon pollution by 2020. But
Canada will miss that target by a long shot, according to
environmental groupswho point
to the
aggressive development of the Alberta tar sands oil and expired clean
energy subsidies. The commissioner of the Department of Environment
and Sustainable Development noted in a recent report that
Canada "does not have answers" to most of its environmental
concerns. Australia, meanwhile, had the world's highest
emissions per capita in 2012 - topping even America's. The
government's mediocre ambition of cutting emissions 5 per cent by
2020 won't happen either: it projects emissions to grow 2 per cent a
year, according to Inside
Climate News.
The
hostility toward environmental interests goes even deeper than energy
policy. Harper has battled his own scientists, independent
journalists, and environmental groups at odds with his views.
Climate
scientists have reported that they are unable to speak to press about
their own findings, feeling effectively "muzzled"
by agencies that want to script talking points for them. In
June, a government spokesperson explained that federal meteorologists
must speak only "to their area of expertise," which does
not include climate change, according to a government spokesperson.
Journalists sometimes face bullying, too. Environmental author Andrew
Nikiforuk told ThinkProgress that
"a government of thugs" slandered him and shut him out of
events. But environmentalists may fare the worst. Seven environmental
nonprofits in Canada have accused the
Canada Revenue Agency of unfairly targeting them for audits.
According to internal documents obtained by theGuardian, Canada's
police and Security Intelligence Service identified nonviolent
environmental protests - like people who oppose hydrofracking and the
Keystone XL tar sands pipeline - as "forms of attack" fitting
the "number of cases where we think people might be inclined to
acts of terrorism".
Australia,
for its part, has downplayed scientific findings. Abbott, along with
his environment minister Greg Hunt, have rejected any link between
extreme weather and global warming. Abbott, who once called the
science of climate change "absolute
crap",
said last year that UN Climate Chief Christiana Figueres was "talking
out of her hat" when saying that rising temperatures were
driving more intense and frequent brushfires. "Climate change is
real as I have often said and we should take strong action against it
but these fires are certainly not a function of climate change,"
he argued. Hunt defended his
boss, citing Wikipedia as his proof. "I looked up what Wikipedia
says for example, just to see what the rest of the world thought, and
it opens up with the fact that bushfires in Australia are frequently
occurring events during the hotter months of the year. Large areas of
land are ravaged every year by bushfires. That’s the Australian
experience." He could have referred to his Department of
Environment's website instead, had it not earlier removed explicit
references connecting climate change, heatwaves, and fires.
As
the host of the G20 this November, Australia is in an awkward
position. Australians have staged protests, while the US and European
leaders have pressured Abbott to put climate change on the agenda. He
has refused.
There's no room for climate, he says, because the summit is about
"economic security" and "the importance of private
sector-led growth."
What's
even more baffling about the rise of climate denial in both countries
is that it's apparently not the popular view in either country.
According to the Pew
Research Center,
the majority of Australians and Canadians say climate change is a
major threat - as opposed to 40 per cent of Americans who say the
same.
Of
course, the US has reversed itself recently, too. President Barack
Obama is making climate change a second-term priority, and has taken
steps to cap carbon pollution from power plants. Such initiatives
have put the US on track to meet its pledge in Copenhagen in 2009 to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions 17 per cent by 2020. At the same
time, China, which faces internal pressure over air pollution, is
looking a lot more serious about slowing down pollution; it will
begin a national cap-and-trade
program in
2016. Even India is redoubling efforts on clean energy, to meet the
power needs of its growing population. Half the world plans to put
a price
on carbon.
It's
true that neither Canada nor Australia has much responsibility for
the amount of heat-trapping gasses in the atmosphere. The United
States, China, and India made up a combined 49
per cent of the world's carbon emissions in 2013. Canada and
Australia, by comparison, emit 3.5 per cent of total carbon emissions
combined. But the critical requirement for an international
climate change agreement - which negotiatiors will try to hammer out
in Paris next year - is that every country big and small make a
commitment to greenhouse gas targets. Fortunately, the negligence of
two smaller, industrialized countries won't be the fatal blow to
negotiations in Paris. Still, by ducking their own responsibility,
Australia and Canada are ignoring their "global conscience"
- to borrow a former prime minister's words.
A
decade ago, America's close allies due north and across the Pacific
rightly shamed us on our poor response to climate change. Now,
they've lost the moral high ground. At the September United Nations
Climate Summit, the largest gathering of world leaders yet on the
issue, both Abbott and Harper were no-shows. The ministers sent in
their place also arrived empty-handed; Australia's foreign
minister suggested that
only larger countries should be responsible for more ambitious
climate action. Canada environment minister Leona
Aglukkaq repeated an
already-public commitment that
Canada would copy Obama's fuel economy regulations requiring 35.5
miles per gallon. Afterward, in an interview with
the Globe
and Mail,
Aglukkaq spoke of the unfairness of a global treaty. "It’s not
up to one country to solve the global greenhouse-gas emissions. I
mean, seriously now, it’s just not fair. We all have to do our
part, big or small countries.”
That's
true. If only her small country would do its part, too.
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