Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Emissions Targets Stemming From Paris Won't Be Internationally Binding; Catherine McKenna

IANS, 27 Nov, 2015 11:25 AM
    OTTAWA — Canada's environment minister says she's hoping a durable, legally binding agreement will be reached at next week's climate summit in Paris.
     
    But Catherine McKenna says any eventual targets set by countries involved in the negotiations likely won't be legally enforceable internationally because the United States isn't prepared to accept that as a condition for reaching a deal.
     
    And McKenna says no one expects Canada to announce its own national targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions in Paris.
     
    The minister also acknowledges that Ottawa currently doesn't have the ability to force provinces and territories to live up to their climate change commitments, but wants a mechanism in place by the time ministers come up with a national target months from now.
     
    NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says that, without firm CO2 reduction targets being set, the Paris summit will be a failure.
     
    Mulcair says the Liberal government should be going into the summit with something more ambitious than climate change targets put forward by former Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
     
    McKenna has said her government considers the Harper target — a 30 per cent reduction below 2005 levels by 2030 — to be the least Canada can do.
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has promised to meet with the premiers 90 days after the conference in the French capital to hammer out a national climate change strategy.
     
    Mulcair says the Liberals are "shovelling" the issue forward for a few months but he says Canada must meet its obligation to slash emissions and combat climate change.
     
    A Canadian delegation including the premiers, Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde and Mulcair will attend the Paris talks.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Imposter Snow-Sport Helmets A Concern While Canadian Sellers Not Bound By Laws

    Imposter Snow-Sport Helmets A Concern While Canadian Sellers Not Bound By Laws
    Superior helmets are certified by an international standards organization, but in Canada there's no law on safety regulations for ski or snowboard headgear.

    Imposter Snow-Sport Helmets A Concern While Canadian Sellers Not Bound By Laws

    Ticket Sold In Ontario Claims Record $64 Million Lotto 649 Jackpot

    A single winning ticket for the 64$ million grand prize — the biggest lottery jackpot in Canadian lottery history — was sold in the community just west of Toronto.

    Ticket Sold In Ontario Claims Record $64 Million Lotto 649 Jackpot

    New Veterans Policies Enacted With Feedback; Broke Federal Rules, Says Advocate

    Regulations putting in motion new benefits for the most critically-injured soldiers were posted in the Canada Gazette on July 16, just a few weeks before the federal call.

    New Veterans Policies Enacted With Feedback; Broke Federal Rules, Says Advocate

    Ottawa Appoints Trio Of Scientists To Study Montreal Sewage Dump Plan

    Environment Canada says the city did not provide enough data to conclude whether or not the untreated wastewater would be "acutely toxic."

    Ottawa Appoints Trio Of Scientists To Study Montreal Sewage Dump Plan

    Pierre Trudeau Makes World News On His Birthday: A Foreign Look At The Election

    The late Pierre Elliott Trudeau was making international news on what would have been his birthday on Sunday as foreign media focused on the possibility his son might follow in his footsteps to become Canada's next prime minister.

    Pierre Trudeau Makes World News On His Birthday: A Foreign Look At The Election

    Former Conservative MP Dona Cadman Backs Surrey Liberal Randeeep Singh Sarai

    Former Conservative MP Dona Cadman Backs Surrey Liberal Randeeep Singh Sarai
    “He’s got vision,” she said. “For Surrey Centre, he is the best candidate.”

    Former Conservative MP Dona Cadman Backs Surrey Liberal Randeeep Singh Sarai