Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Net-zero emissions target by 2050 to become law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2020 07:07 PM
  • Net-zero emissions target by 2050 to become law

Legislation that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said "cements" his promise to mostly eliminate greenhouse gas emissions within 30 years has been introduced in the House of Commons.

"This is an ambitious goal," Trudeau said Thursday morning in a virtual address at a conference as part of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation forum.

"But our kids, our economy, and our future can afford nothing less. Net-zero is as much about avoiding the worst impacts of climate change as it is about creating good jobs and a competitive economy for years to come."

The proposed legislation, Bill C-12, promises both transparency and accountability to get to net-zero emissions by 2050.

It fulfils a promise the Liberals made in the 2019 election to be more aggressive at cutting greenhouse-gas emissions.

It will require Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson to set five-year targets, starting in 2030, for curbing emissions on the way to net-zero emissions by 2050.

Net-zero means either eliminating all emissions or ensuring any still produced are absorbed by natural means like forests and wetlands, or technology like carbon capture and storage systems.

An emissions-reduction plan, progress report and assessment report on each would need to be tabled in the house, and the bill orders the environment commissioner to audit Canada's climate change mitigation measures at least once every five years.

The bill, if passed, would create an advisory body to help Wilkinson find the path to net-zero, and will require the minister of finance to report each year on what her department is doing to mitigate the financial risks from climate change.

Trudeau told the APEC forum that net-zero is "real" and is about both the environment and the economy. He said global investors are increasingly making decisions based on climate risk, and being greener is now a competitive advantage.

Canada has set multiple goals for curbing emissions over the last three decades and has never met a single one of them.

It missed its 2012 target under the Kyoto accord by more than 100 million tonnes and at the end of this year will miss its 2020 target by even more than that.

The difference is more than what Canada emits to heat and power the entire country.

Its Paris target is to reduce emissions by 30 per cent compared to 2005 levels by 2030. Current policies, including the carbon tax, banning coal power plants and regulating methane emissions in the oil and gas industry, will only get Canada about two-thirds of the way there.

Catherine Abreu, executive director of the Climate Action Network Canada, said she was more hopeful than she had been about the pending legislation, because the title of the bill has the words "transparency and accountability" in it.

She said to live up to its title, the bill will need to set specific carbon budgets for how much Canada can emit each year, decide where those emissions are going to come from, and then show the ways to hit those budgets.

It will also, she said, require an enforcement mechanism that isn't just about targets, but setting out who decides if they have been met and what happens if they are not.

"There is a difference between legislating a target and legislating climate accountability," said Abreu. "We need to fundamentally fix the way we do climate action in Canada because it is not working."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey Tree Lighting Festival Celebrates The Holiday Season At 9th Annual Event

Surrey Tree Lighting Festival Celebrates The Holiday Season At 9th Annual Event
“The Surrey Tree Lighting Festival has become an annual tradition that brings the community together to celebrate Christmas and the holiday season,” says Mayor Doug McCallum.

Surrey Tree Lighting Festival Celebrates The Holiday Season At 9th Annual Event

City of Surrey Activates Winter Road Preparedness Strategy

“Ensuring that our major roads are safe and passable during the winter season is a top priority,” said Mayor Doug McCallum.

City of Surrey Activates Winter Road Preparedness Strategy

Person Arrested And Questioned In Case Of Premature Births At N.B. Hospital

Person Arrested And Questioned In Case Of Premature Births At N.B. Hospital
MONCTON, N.B. - RCMP in New Brunswick say one person has been arrested in connection with allegations that patients at the Moncton Hospital were improperly given a labour-inducing drug earlier this year.    

Person Arrested And Questioned In Case Of Premature Births At N.B. Hospital

Arctic Chill Grips Much Of B.C.; Strong Winds Cause Outages On South Coast

VANCOUVER - A bitter cold snap gripping much of British Columbia's south coast, central and northeast regions is being compounded by strong winds in some southern areas and snow in the Central Interior.    

Arctic Chill Grips Much Of B.C.; Strong Winds Cause Outages On South Coast

'We Made History': UN Indigenous Rights Bill Approved Unanimously In B.C.

VANCOUVER - British Columbia has become the first province in Canada to formally implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.    

'We Made History': UN Indigenous Rights Bill Approved Unanimously In B.C.

You've Got Mail: Feds Test New E-Notification Service To Save Cash, Time

You've Got Mail: Feds Test New E-Notification Service To Save Cash, Time
OTTAWA - A group of digital disruptors inside the federal government is testing a way to send tens of millions of e-notifications each month to save workers — and taxpayers — time and money.    

You've Got Mail: Feds Test New E-Notification Service To Save Cash, Time