City urged to show 'spine' on climate change - Action News
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Ottawa

City urged to show 'spine' on climate change

Ottawa's environment committee has endorsed tough new targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and a new climate change master plan.

Environment committee approves strategy to reduce GHG emissions

Environmental activists rally outside Ottawa city hall on Apr. 24, 2019, urging council to declare a climate emergency. (Kate Porter/CBC)

Environmental advocatesare urging city councillors to show some "spine" as they usher Ottawa toward a cleaner, greener future.

At its meeting Tuesday, the city's committee on environmental protection, water and waste management endorsed tough new targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, as well as a new climate change master plan.

"The work laid out in this plan is enormous, but is in keeping with the enormous scale of work to be done," Sharon Coward, executive directorof EnviroCentre, told councillors.

The staff report sets out a climate road map to 2050. A list of specific carbon-cutting projects, their price tagsand how they rank as priorities will follow inthe spring.

Much will depend on how much upper levels of government are willing to kick in, but the new plan improves the city's odds of getting those grants, said Steve Willis, general managerof planning, infrastructure and economic development.

Advocates cautiously optimistic

Raymond Leury of the Electric Vehicle Council of Ottawa likesthe idea of setting a "carbon budget" anddeciding how to "spend" limited emissions.

"If managers are compensatedand measuredon carbon budgets as well as they are on financial budgets, that will incent them to do what they can to reduce the amount of carbon that's emitted."

Raymond Leury of the Electric Vehicle Council of Ottawa is calling on the city to make charging stations more accessible. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Leury said to hit those targets, the city will need to convert its fleet of vehicles to electric, starting now. The city may also look at allowing electric vehicles in high-occupancy vehicle lanes, and installing charging stations in community housing buildings.

For years, advocates have been calling on the city to take an urgent approach to climate change, but staff have recommended onlyminimal spending.

"We'vecome a long way," said Robb Barnes of Ecology Ottawa, who believes the road map is directly linked to the declaration of a climate emergency in April.

Nudgingbuilders to change

Barnes and othersurged the city to move even faster on climate change.But emissions from city buildings, vehiclesand landfills represent only a small part of the picture.

Ninety-fiveper cent of emissions generated inOttawa don't stem from city operations, and they edged upward in 2018.

Joan Haysomworks with builders and the private sector on energy efficiency at J.L. Richards and Associates, andcalled on thethe city to nudge them to do more than the status quo.

"I encourage the city to show leadershipand strengthand a spine to create an environment where we build a better city," Haysom said.