Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

Inuit plan says climate change can't be separated from social issues

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jun, 2019 05:53 PM

    Climate change affects all parts of life in the North and any plan to deal with it must be just as wide-ranging, says a strategy document to be released today by Canada's Inuit.

    "This is something that isn't just a policy area for us," said Natan Obed, head of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, which wrote the strategy. "It also is a life-and-death situation for people who are still inextricably linked to the environment."

    The Arctic is warming twice as quickly as the rest of the planet and that means the Inuit need their own plan to deal with it, Obed said.

    Accompanied by federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna in Inuvik, N.W.T., Obed is to release a 48-page outline that says climate change can't be tackled without addressing many of the other problems Inuit face.

    "We have often been seen as the canary in the coal mine, often brought forward to tell the world about how the Arctic is changing, but that's usually where it ends," Obed said in an interview.

    "Inuit have decided we are going to seek a partnership with the government of Canada and start to adapt any way we can through co-ordinated action."

    McKenna, who promised an initial million-dollar contribution to implement the plan, agrees Inuit need their own approach. "You don't want climate policy for Inuit being designed in Ottawa," she said.

    The plan deals with much more than melting sea ice. It calls for renewed infrastructure — from civic buildings to airstrips to waste facilities — that is threatened by permafrost melt. It also recommends turning away from aging, carbon-intensive diesel generators that power northern communities.

    It insists climate change amplifies social problems and can't be considered apart from them. "The climate risks we face compound the social and economic inequities we have endured for generations," the document says.

    McKenna acknowledged that. "It is everything from health and well-being to food to infrastructure to energy. And that is a much smarter way of going to tackle a really challenging problem."

    The plan includes specific recommendations to reform building codes and practices in the North to incorporate Inuit knowledge. It also calls for spending on air and marine transport and improved telecommunications.

    It asks for power utilities, designed and controlled by Inuit, that build on renewable energy such as hydro, solar and wind. It says more research is needed into sustainable energy practical for the Arctic and extra funding is needed for energy-efficient housing.

    Hunters should be supported to ease food insecurity and increase safety of those travelling on the changing landscape, the plan suggests.

    It would take at least a decade to follow through on all the plan's recommendations, Obed said. But some items are more pressing.

    "The infrastructure needs and the (housing) retrofits are definitely going to be needed in the coming years. Those investments are going to cost a lot of money."

    McKenna said the government is aware of the need, but she wouldn't make any promises.

    "Clearly, there are broader needs in terms of infrastructure and getting communities off diesel," she said. "We need to look at these investments and we need to look at the health and well-being of Inuit economic prosperity through a climate lens as well."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    VIDEOS: Jagmeet Singh Jokes About Personal Absence From Ottawa, Teaches Audience Bhangra

    VIDEOS: Jagmeet Singh Jokes About Personal Absence From Ottawa, Teaches Audience Bhangra
    Federal party leaders got a few digs in at one another and at themselves at the parliamentary press gallery dinner Saturday night.

    VIDEOS: Jagmeet Singh Jokes About Personal Absence From Ottawa, Teaches Audience Bhangra

    Authorities Investigate Death At Rail Crossing That Reports Say Involved Scooter

    Authorities Investigate Death At Rail Crossing That Reports Say Involved Scooter
    CHILLIWACK, B.C. — A death at a British Columbia railway crossing is under investigation after reports say a scooter got stuck on the tracks late Saturday afternoon.

    Authorities Investigate Death At Rail Crossing That Reports Say Involved Scooter

    First-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against 18-Year-Old In Reading Room Death

    First-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against 18-Year-Old In Reading Room Death
    An 18-year-old man has been charged with first-degree murder in the death of a woman who was attacked last week while working at the downtown Christian Science Reading Centre.

    First-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against 18-Year-Old In Reading Room Death

    Justin Trudeau Mum On Pipeline Front Even As May 31 Deadline Looms

    Justin Trudeau Mum On Pipeline Front Even As May 31 Deadline Looms
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insists his government is going to get the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion built, but still has nothing to say about how, even as Kinder Morgan's deadline clock ticks ever closer to the end.

    Justin Trudeau Mum On Pipeline Front Even As May 31 Deadline Looms

    Central Alberta Zoo Gets $500 In Fines After Ice Cream Eating Bear Video

    Central Alberta Zoo Gets $500 In Fines After Ice Cream Eating Bear Video
    RED DEER, Alta. — A central Alberta zoo must pay $500 in fines after taking a bear for ice cream at a drive-thru.

    Central Alberta Zoo Gets $500 In Fines After Ice Cream Eating Bear Video

    This Summer Will Be Slightly Warmer Than Last Year's, Meteorologist Says

    This Summer Will Be Slightly Warmer Than Last Year's, Meteorologist Says
    One of Canada's most high-profile weather forecasters says that while spring may have been slow to start, it will be a hot summer throughout much of the country.

    This Summer Will Be Slightly Warmer Than Last Year's, Meteorologist Says