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Environmental watchdog says Ontario’s energy plan ignores provincial climate law

Ontario's environmental watchdog says the province will need to shift away from fossil fuel used in some cars and trucks in order to meet its greenhouse gas goals in 2030. Zoran Milich / File / Getty Images

TORONTO – Ontario’s environmental watchdog says the Liberal government‘s long-term energy plan ignores its own climate change law and more must be done to shift the province from fossil fuels to low-carbon sources.

In her report on the province’s energy conservation efforts, Environmental Commissioner Dianne Saxe says that Ontario’s climate laws — which target reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 — would require a drop in fossil fuel use by 40 to 50 per cent in the next 13 years to meet that goal.

READ MORE: Ontario has work to do to meet long-term climate change goals: report

Saxe says that the province’s long-term energy plan, which was released last fall, predicts stable demand for electricity but doesn’t spell out how it will reduce fossil fuel use.

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She says that in order to meet that goal the province will need to shift away from fossil fuel used in some cars and trucks, and from home heating using fossil fuels to electricity.

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READ MORE: Feds to gather data on every new vehicle registered in Canada, plus most older ones

Saxe praises the government’s role in cleaning up Ontario’s electricity system by ending coal-fired power, but the report acknowledges that it has resulted in an increase in costs for ratepayers.

Saxe says the move away from coal-fired power has helped reduce the number of smog days every year and the health impacts associated with air pollution.

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