Canadians may not notice immediate effects from an international agreement on climate change.
But experts say the deal agreed to by 200 world leaders pushes the country further down a path that will profoundly change how people heat their homes, earn their livings and get from one place to another.
“I think we’re talking about transforming the Canadian economy,” Erin Flanagan of the clean-energy think tank Pembina Institute said Monday.
“It requires changes to our mobility, our consumption, our fundamental economics around oil and gas.”
The Paris conference is important mostly because it’s the first time that many countries have agreed that climate is a global issue, said Mark Jaccard, an energy economist at Simon Fraser University.
READ MORE: Now for the tough part: Starting the world’s strict carbon diet
“Almost all international players said we are part of the solution now,” he said. “We never had that.”
Even though reductions announced by various countries won’t limit a rise in temperature to the agreed-on 2 C, it’s a start, said Jaccard.
“It puts in place hope for the future.”
For Canadians wondering how much saving the planet is going to cost them, answers are more likely to emerge from an upcoming meeting between Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the premiers, which he has promised within the next 90 days.
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“What really matters for the people in their living room is what we do in terms of policy development when we get back from Paris,” said Chris Ragan of the Ecofiscal Commission, an independent group of economists and business representatives.
READ MORE: Trudeau calls on Canadians to help enact Paris Agreement
While items such as a price on carbon draw the biggest headlines, Ottawa could just as easily turn to regulatory measures that don’t hit taxpayers directly, Jaccard said. California has successfully used low-carbon fuel standards to lower its greenhouse gas emissions.
“You can design regulations that are quite economically efficient and give incentives for innovation.”
Industry says it’s ready.
“Within Canada, we are committed to improving our performance,” said Tim McMillan, president of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. “We’re investing in technology to do things more efficiently.”
Just as long as everyone plays along, McMillan added.
“This is a global challenge and if this (agreement) has the strength to bring other countries along to improve their performance, it’ll be successful.”
The agreement contains a promise to monitor the climate performance of each signatory country every five years.
Some provinces are likely going to have to do more than others, said Flanagan, depending on how hard and how expensive it is for them to reduce emissions.
“It’s appropriate for some provinces to do more (and) for the question of burden-sharing to be centred around where can we find the cheapest reductions. Some provinces will take the lead on electricity. Some will take the lead on transportation. Some will take the lead on oil and gas.”
Alberta Environment Minister Shannon Phillips said Albertans will start to see the implications on their pocketbooks in the province’s next budget. Over the next three months, consultations are to be held on everything from carbon tax rebates to helping coal mining towns shift their economies.
“We will be having conversations with Albertans on what those rebates look like and how they are delivered, adjustments for small business, municipalities and First Nations,” she said. “We will be having lots of conversations with industry on this topic of performance standards.”
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