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06/23/2008 08:13 AM     print story email story  

Canada Sued For Failing to Meet Kyoto Obligations

SustainableBusiness.com News

Canada is being sued for failing to meet its obligation to reduce greenhouse gases under the Kyoto Protocol.

The lawsuit, filed by Friends of the Earth Canada, is the first ever to seek enforcement of the Kyoto protocol, which 180 nations, including Canada, ratified. 

Of the 38 industrialized nations with binding targets for emissions reductions under the Kyoto Protocol, Canada is the only one that has said that it wil not meet its obligations. 

The lawsuit is suing the conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper in an effort to force it to adopt a new plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 6% below 1990 levles.

"The case is about defending the fundamental principle that the government must be accountable and comply with the law,"  Ecojustice lawyer Hugh Wilkins said. "The government cannot pick and choose which laws to obey. The law is the law.

The Kyoto Protocol was ratified under the Liberal government of previous Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien. Since Harper took office in 2006, the nation has taken a different tack on emissions reductions, announcing much softer targets and failing to produce a climate change plan, as directed by the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act, passed in June 2007.

A Canadian federal court is expected to rule on the case later this summer or in the fall.

Canada's opposition Liberal Party unveiled a carbon-tax plan last week, which they hope will be the key to returning their party to power in upcoming elections.

Tar sand projects, primarily in the province of Alberta, are largely responsible for increasing emissions levels, as the escalating price of oil has made it more cost effective to begin removal of extremely dirty oil deposits mixed with sand in the region.



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