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Fraction of Nova Scotia’s Green Fund spent on climate change programs: auditor

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Fraction of Nova Scotia’s Green Fund spent on climate change programs: auditor
WATCH: Nova Scotia’s auditor general has found that about $60 million earmarked for climate change is sitting in the bank accounts of private, not-for-profit companies. While the organizations have been reporting back to the province, Kim Adair says the Department of Environment and Climate Change needs to improve its monitoring. Callum Smith brings us the details – Feb 28, 2023

Only a fraction of a Nova Scotia government fund established to combat climate change has been spent on solving the problem, the province’s auditor general revealed in an audit released Tuesday.

Kim Adair said a performance audit of the Green Fund, established in 2019, found almost $74 million was transferred out of the fund over its first two years of operation, but only $11.9 million was spent on climate change programs.

The bulk of the money — about $60 million — was left sitting in “program partner” bank accounts as of March 2022, Adair said. Virtually all of that cash was sent to two independent, non-profit agencies: EfficiencyOne and the Clean Foundation.

Adair’s report says it remains unclear why the Department of Environment and Climate Change handed millions of dollars to non-government parties before the money was needed to deliver Green Fund initiatives.

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“We weren’t given a good reason or rationale for doing that,” Adair told a news conference Tuesday. “I liken it to this example: If you were going to build a house and you have a contract with the builder, would you give the builder 100 per cent of the funds to build that house before he even starts?”

The report says the two agencies were selected by the department to deliver its programs “based on prior relationships.”

Click to play video: 'N.S., N.B., look at options to protect land corridor from climate change'
N.S., N.B., look at options to protect land corridor from climate change

Adair said both agencies reported required information to the Environment Department, but she said the department was not reviewing that data to ensure targets were met.

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“The practice of dispersing all Green Fund money within the year to multi-year programs increases the risk that funds may not be used for their intended purpose,” Adair said. “It also reduces the government’s flexibility to redirect funds to other targeted areas.”

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The Green Fund was set up to collect revenue from Nova Scotia’s cap-and-trade program, which allowed companies to emit greenhouse gases so long as they purchased emissions allowances. Another $52 million was collected in the 2021-22 fiscal year, but that money was not part of the audit.

Last fall, the Nova Scotia government tabled legislation for a new emissions-reduction plan that would replace its cap-and-trade system with a carbon-pricing system.

“That happened after our audit period,” Adair said. “It remains to be seen (what will happen). There’s no clear lines of expectations as to what this spending is supposed to do to achieve those goals.”

The auditor general’s report includes six recommendations for change, all of which should be considered as the government shifts to a modified Nova Scotia climate change fund that is tied to the new emissions-reduction plan, Adair said.

In response, Environment and Climate Change Minister Tim Halman said he had already accepted all of Adair’s recommendations.

He said part of the problem with the Green Fund was that the province did not have an updated climate plan in place when the fund was introduced.

“I want Nova Scotians to know that as we design the new climate change fund, which will replace the Green Fund, it is going to reflect the auditor general’s recommendations,” he told a virtual news conference Tuesday.

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The province has set a goal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 53 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030, and to be net-zero by 2050.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 28, 2023.

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