The Huffington Post Canada - Joshua Ostroff
Words matter, and nowhere is that clearer than with Wednesday's
unveiling of the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change during the
swearing-in of Canada's new cabinet.
Catherine McKenna, a lawyer with a background in international trade and social justice, is in charge of the renamed portfolio.
"Canadians
expect their government to be responsible around climate change and
addressing the impacts to the environment that we are facing," Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau said following the ceremony. "Canada is going to
be a strong and positive actor on the world stage, including in Paris at COP21.
That's why we have a very strong minister, not just of the environment
but of the environment and climate change who will be at the heart of
this discussion."
Critics
have spent the past 10 years decrying government indifference, if not
outright antagonism, to the issue of climate change. The previous
Conservative government pulled Canada out of the Kyoto Accord, muzzled government scientists, and refused to allow Opposition leaders to attend international conferences. (The latter prompted Trudeau's profane response in Parliament.)
While Harper did pass some environmental policies, a recent report card
from a Simon Fraser University professor gave the Harper government an
F. The report authored by Mark Jaccard said, "Since 2006, the government
has implemented no regulations that would materially reduce Canadian
GHG emissions from what they otherwise would be in 2020."
Trudeau, on the other hand, campaigned on climate change. During the Munk Debate,
he tied the environment and the economy together, and promised $40
billion for public transit and green infrastructure to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions.
After winning the federal election, he also
immediately invited opposition leaders including the Green Party's
Elizabeth May, and the provincial premiers to attend the upcoming Paris
climate change summit.
Trudeau is not the first leader to change
the name of the entire ministry to include climate change. Ontario has
had a minister of environment and climate change following the Liberal
win in 2014.
As well, climate change is referenced as the titular
portfolio of environment ministers from Australia, Belgium, Denmark,
Greece, New Zealand, India, Scotland, the UK and the European Union.
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