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Canada only a quarter of the way to greenhouse gas target

More evidence emerged today that Canada is nowhere near halfway to meeting its 2020 target of reducing greenhouse gases by 17 per cent from 2005 levels.

Environment minister Leona Aglukkaq's office lets it slip that Canada not even 'halfway there'

Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq's office inadvertently admitted that Canada is not halfway to meeting its 2020 GHG target. It is more like a quarter of the way there. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Canada is only about a quarter of the way to hitting its greenhouse gas reduction goal, Environment Minister LeonaAglukkaq'soffice admitted in a news releaseMonday.

Until recently, the government has stuck to a claim that Canada is halfway to cutting its emissions by 17 per cent from 2005 levels by 2020.

In a news releaseMonday,Aglukkaq'soffice said emissions have been reduced 4.8 per cent from 2005 levels.

That figure works out to about a quarter 28 per cent of Canada's target, with six years left to go.

"Since 2005, Canadian greenhouse gas emissions have decreased by 4.8 per cent," said one sentence in the statementexplaining how Canada had succeeded in decoupling economic growth from greenhouse gasgrowth.

Former Environment Minister Peter Kent was fond of pointing out that Canada was halfway there in terms of meeting the targets it set for itself at the Copenhagen climate change conference in 2009.

Former environment minister Peter Kent was fond of pointing out that Canada was halfway to meeting its 2020 greenhouse gas target. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

"Last year, we were one-quarter of the way to our goal. And now were halfway there," Kent said in an August 2012 speech in Ottawa.

In February of this year, he said something similar to an audience in Mississauga, Ont., when announcing the government's heavy duty vehicle regulations.

"It is estimated that we are already halfway there in our national effort to meet Canada's Copenhagen target," he pointed out.

Kent was dropped from cabinet this summer.

Aglukkaq, his replacement, has shied away from the "halfway there" remark and instead prefers to focus on the failure of the last government to make any greenhouse gas reductions.

"Since we formed government, we have seen a reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 130 megatonnes from what they would have been under the Liberals," Aglukkaq told CBC News. It is not clear how the minister came to that number.

The Liberal government of Jean Chrtien signed the Kyoto Protocol in 1998 and formally ratified it in 2002. The Liberals committed Canada to reducing greenhouse gases by six per cent from 1990 levels by 2012. In 2006, when the Liberals lost power to the Conservatives, greenhouse gas emissions were 23 per cent higher than than they were in 1990.

Corrections

  • This story has been edited from a previous version that misstated the dates for Canada's signing and ratification of the Kyoto Protocol. Canada signed the accord in 1998 and ratified it in 2002.
    Nov 19, 2013 8:47 AM ET