IISD in the news

Alberta pumps $40 million more to carbon capture

In an effort to curb emissions, Alberta is continuing to pump millions of dollars into carbon capture technologies. This week, Emissions Reduction Alberta (ERA) announced it was investing $40 million of public money into 11 carbon capture projects to help position the province for even greater funding opportunities from Ottawa. The ERA funding also aligns with the province’s plan to invest over $300 million over the next four years in further carbon capture projects.

July 15, 2022

IISD in the news details

Topic
Energy
Climate Change Mitigation
Region
Canada
Impact area
Climate
Guide

Voluntary Local Reviews of Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals

A handbook for Canadian communities

Getting started with a report on a community's well-being may seem daunting. There are many issues you can choose to track as indicators of progress. Reliable data may be hard to find. Community members may even disagree on what "progress" means. However, a growing number of communities that have produced Voluntary Local Reviews (VLRs) are sharing lessons learned in how to craft meaningful, holistic reports that measure sustainable development pushes at the neighbourhood level and connect them with global efforts to achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

July 14, 2022
  • This #VLR Handbook will help communities in #Canada navigate the rapidly growing pool of support materials to measure #SDGs progress and challenges at the local level.

  • In 2021, Canadian cities Kelowna and Winnipeg produced #VLRs to try and measure community well-being and #SDGs at the neighbourhood level. Our VLR Handbook shares lessons they learned.

  • Canadian communities' efforts to achieve the #SDGs and measure well-being offer special paths to advance #reconciliation and support Indigenous leadership.

Canadian communities have special considerations when they set out to create a VLR, given the country's multicultural makeup, history of colonialism and reconciliation efforts, and vast environmental assets, among other factors. This VLR handbook intends to help Canadian communities of all sizes to launch a VLR by quickly identifying tools, resources, and relevant experiences from other communities available for their support—especially the first Canadian VLRs produced by Kelowna, British Columbia, and Winnipeg, Manitoba.

This document is the zero draft of what we hope will become a collaborative effort to collect and share resources, tools, and good practices for local SDG implantation and reporting in Canada. If you would like to be involved in the development of future iterations of this handbook, propose resources for inclusion, or suggest corrections or improvements, please contact IISD’s tracking progress team at [email protected].

Policy Analysis

Cutting Gas Taxes? There Are Better Ways to Address Affordability and Provide Direct Relief

Cuts have already been far outstripped by Canada's rising gas prices, and people most in need may not own a car. Lower taxes also help fuel companies.

July 11, 2022

The following op-ed was originally published by The Toronto Star on July 11, 2022, and is reprinted below with permission.

Prices at the pumps are the talk of every town across Canada. A global shortage of crude oil, exacerbated by efforts to cut ties with Russian oil and gas, are sending costs sky high. These record gas prices—and the rising costs of everything else—are impacting people everywhere, many of whom are struggling to pay the bills.

Governments undoubtably need to address these affordability challenges. But to support those most impacted, cutting gas taxes fails on every count. There are much better options that offer direct relief to those who need it most, and at a lower cost.

Despite this, some governments are already opting to cut taxes on fuel. Alberta was first here, suspending their fuel tax starting in April, at an estimated cost of $600 million for the first three months. Ontario recently followed suit with a six-month cut to gas and fuel taxes, with an expected cost of $645 million. Newfoundland and Labrador also cut gas taxes until the end of 2022. These cuts, ranging from 5.7 to 13 cents per litre, have already been far outstripped by rising gas prices, which have climbed over 50 per cent in Canada in the past year.

Other countries such as Italy, Germany, Ireland, and the Netherlands have made similar moves, while U.S. President Joe Biden calls for the same.

Axing Gas Taxes Doesn't Cut It

Lowering taxes on gasoline saves money for vehicle drivers, but low-income people most in need of savings may not own a car. People with higher incomes typically own and use cars most, and stand to reap the highest financial benefits. If support was targeted to those who need it, such as through direct payments, recipients could choose to spend it on gasoline or other household needs like groceries, which have also soared in price. The Alberta fuel tax holiday is estimated to benefit families $70 to $200 per quarter on average, but that $600 million could alternatively cover three $200 payments to one million low-income households.

Lower gasoline taxes also end up benefitting fuel companies. Lower gas prices incentivize people to use more of it, thereby increasing producers’ earnings. Yet oil and gas companies are already making record profits, with revenues projected to reach $242 billion this year—up 58 per cent from last year. Even considering increased royalties, there are more effective ways to help struggling Canadians. Not to mention that some of these companies aren’t paying their own taxes, owing Alberta municipalities over $250 million.

Additionally, these taxes fund public services. Cuts to taxes mean cuts to spending elsewhere, like health care, education or child care. As emergency rooms across the country face staffing shortages and closures, we cannot afford additional cuts to vital social services that might result from revenue shortfalls.

Supporting Communities Without Tax Cuts

Governments should take alternative action to make sure Canadians receive relief from increased energy prices. One option is redistributing profits collected on fossil fuels to communities in need through cash transfers or expanded social assistance. The U.K. has done just that, with a new $6.3 billion windfall tax that collects 25 per cent of oil and gas companies’ profits to help fund a relief package distributing direct payments to millions of low-income households and pensioners. Italy also enacted a 25 per cent windfall tax, and Spain, Bulgaria, and Romania are pursuing similar policies.

Canadian governments could also take immediate steps to increase the accessibility of transportation alternatives. Making public transit cheap or free, as Germany did temporarily, would provide a more affordable option for many urban dwellers, and wouldn’t require vehicle ownership or use to see financial relief.

Ultimately, we need to insulate our energy systems from volatile oil and gas prices that will remain unstable in the long-term. This means acting now to ramp up cleaner transport options like electric vehicles and public transportation, and redirecting fossil fuel subsidies to renewable energy and energy efficiency.

The federal government and provinces such as Manitoba and Quebec have said they’re not currently considering gas tax cuts, but pressure to act on affordability remains. Let’s embrace more equitable, creative and economically sensible solutions to support Canadians through this difficult period, while transitioning to alternatives that will get us off the gasoline price roller coaster.

Policy Analysis details

Topic
Energy
Climate Change Mitigation
Region
Canada
Impact area
Climate
IISD in the news

Microplastics might be entering marine food webs from the bottom up

Microplastics — tiny pieces of plastic less than five millimetres in size — have been found in marine and freshwater animals ranging from tiny zooplankton to large whales.

June 26, 2022

IISD in the news details

Topic
Water
Region
Canada
Global
Project
IISD Experimental Lakes Area
Impact area
Nature
IISD in the news

New federal and provincial funding for Experimental Lakes Area

New Ontario and federal funding for the IISD Experimental Lakes Area (ELA) in northwestern Ontario provides some stability for the organization and enables continuation of key research in such areas impacts of microplastics, impacts of tire additives and tire wear on fish species, and how ecosystems recover from acidification.

June 22, 2022

IISD in the news details

Topic
Water
Region
Canada
Project
IISD Experimental Lakes Area
Impact area
Nature
IISD in the news

Minister Ng welcomes successful Twelfth Ministerial Conference in Geneva

Canada is a trading nation and a strong proponent of the international rules-based multilateral trading system, with the World Trade Organization (WTO) at its core. Multilateralism is essential in achieving a strong, sustainable and inclusive global economic recovery after the COVID-19 pandemic.

June 17, 2022
IISD in the news

Outdoors: Ohio biologists share techniques and technology with African counterparts

She was more than 7,000 miles from her home in Rwanda and had spent the previous two weeks touring the Great Lakes of North America, heavily immersed in the science of fisheries management and hoping to take home a cache of information, technological advances, and sound science that could be applied on the Great Lakes of Africa.

June 11, 2022

IISD in the news details

Press release

New Initiative to Boost Capacity for Nature-Based Climate Solutions

June 7, 2022

JUNE 7, WINNIPEG—The converging crises of biodiversity loss and climate change are rapidly intensifying the vulnerabilities of communities and ecosystems around the world. Launching today, the Nature for Climate Adaptation Initiative (NCAI) has one crucial goal: to help enable nature-based climate action that protects both livelihoods and biodiversity in the most vulnerable parts of the world.

Offering a wide range of resources, expert guidance, and accessible learning opportunities, this new project by the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), with support from Global Affairs Canada, provides civil society organizations with the tools they need to enhance the implementation of nature-based climate solutions (NBCS) for adaptation that protect people of all genders and social groups. The NCAI will also feature an e-learning course on Ecosystem-based Adaptation—developed in partnership with Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)—which will be launching in the coming months.  

“With careful implementation tailored to local contexts, nature-based climate solutions are highly effective and contribute to addressing societal challenges while enhancing biodiversity and ecosystem resilience,” says Veronica Lo, Senior Policy Advisor with IISD’s Resilience Program and lead for the NCAI. “Strengthening the knowledge and capacity of civil society is not only critical for scaling up the implementation of NBCS, it also helps mainstream Ecosystem-based Adaptation across different disciplines and sectors.”

The NCAI uses three pillars to ground its work. It is:

  • Socially inclusive: Integrating principles of good governance and equity as well as considerations of Indigenous and local or Traditional Knowledge in NBCS implementation.
  • Biodiversity positive: Scaling up the implementation of NBCS to enhance biodiversity and ecosystem resilience.
  • Gender responsive: Ensuring that NBCS actively promote and enable gender equality.

“Women and girls in many parts of the world depend extensively on natural resources for their livelihoods and well-being. Nature-based climate solutions reflect this relationship, providing better protection and increased resilience in the face of climate change while also leveraging their unique insights and leadership in planning for and using these solutions,” says Harjit S. Sajjan, Minister of International Development and Minister responsible for the Pacific Economic Development Agency of Canada. 

“Canada’s support for the Nature for Climate Adaptation Initiative is one more way that we are helping to promote social inclusion and gender equality in climate action.”

******
Media contact: 

Alanna Evans, Communications Officer, IISD

[email protected]

Press release details

IISD in the news

British Columbia phases out largest fossil fuel subsidy programs starting this fall

Last month, the government of British Columbia announced plans to eliminate the province’s largest fossil fuel subsidy, the Deep Well Royalty Program. The change is expected to benefit British Columbians and their investments, as well as align with government plans to fight climate change.  

June 6, 2022

IISD in the news details