$1.9B a year to address natural disasters in Canada among 4 takeaways from federal climate report - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:27 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

$1.9B a year to address natural disasters in Canada among 4 takeaways from federal climate report

With British Columbia recording its hottest temperatures on record, Ottawa released its latest major report on climate change, probing how a warming planet will impact everything from infrastructureto tourism and geopolitics.

Increasing number of lawsuits target government over climate policies, report says

A construction worker uses a misting fan to cool down at a work site in Vancouver on Monday during a record heat wave in B.C. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

With British Columbia recording its hottest temperatures on record, the federal government released its latest major report on climate change, probing how a warming planet will impact everything from infrastructureto tourism and geopolitics.

The costsof natural disasters from extreme weather are rising rapidly, averaging $1.9 billion annually, up about $400 million from a decade ago,a senior official with Natural Resources Canada told journalists on Monday.

"There is abundant research indicating that current efforts to adapt are insufficient in the face of rapidly accumulating social and economic losses from current and future climate change impacts," according tothe report, Canada in a Changing Climate: National Issues.

"Research also demonstrates that the window for taking action to reduce increasingly severe impacts is rapidly closing."

Covering legal risks, shipping routes, farming, migrationand more, here are four key takeaways from the 734-page report released on Monday afternoon.

Infrastructure threats

From bridges to sewage systems, Canada's infrastructure is already stressed and aging.

"Much of Canada's core public infrastructure is operating beyond its expected lifecycle and needs replacement or retrofitting," thereport said.

WATCH | What's causing the unprecedented heat wave in Western Canada:

What's causing the unprecedented heat wave in Western Canada

3 years ago
Duration 3:53
David Phillips, senior climatologist for Environment Canada, says the high-pressure heat dome over parts of Western Canada creates an effect that's like 'putting a lid on boiling water.'

Climate change adds a "frightening" dimension to aging infrastructure, Fiona Warren, a senior official withNatural Resources Canada, told reporters on Monday.

Cracking pavement, a reduced lifespan for asphalt, buckling rails impactingfreight transportand the increaseddeterioration of buildings are just some of the threats.

Remote, rural communities are expected to be the mostaffected by infrastructure gaps caused by global warming, Warren said. "Those who are struggling will be hit the hardest."

Spending $1 on improving and adapting infrastructure forclimate change now can lead to between $5 and $6 in benefits later, she said. "Adaptation is occurring and increasing, but it is not keeping pace."

Rising legal risks for government, companies

Angry about what they consider government inaction on climate issues, campaigners are increasingly turning to the courts to try tocompel change.

"Climate change litigation is increasing against governments and their agencies in Canada," the report said.

Spurred onby successful legal challenges against climate policies in the Netherlands and Pakistan, Canadian plaintiffs have launched four separate lawsuits against governmentsas of Sept. 30, 2020.

A person walks past a climate change-themed nature mural on Earth Day in Toronto on April 22, 2021. The extent of summer sea ice in the Canadian Arctic has been declining between five and 20 per cent in the last decade, the federal report said. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Prior to 2018, there were only two Canadian cases in which courts were asked to review alleged climate inaction from the federal government, the report noted.

Following court cases in the United States, campaigners are also likely to target corporations over their climate policies, it added.

Ninety major companies produced nearly 70 per cent of the world's climate-changing carbon dioxide emissions between 1751 and 2017, according to academic data cited in the government's report, meaning energy and resource firms are particularly vulnerable to climate-related lawsuits.

"All public companies are required to demonstrate how they are managing material risk,"Paul Kovacs executive director of the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reductionat Western University in London, Ont., and one of the report's many authors told reporters on Monday.

How companies disclose thoseclimate risks is likely to become a key flashpointfor lawsuits targeting corporate officials in the future, the report said.

"Canadian securities regulators have a wide variety of powers to prosecute companies, their directors and responsible officers for disclosure offences," it said.

"Litigation, even if unsuccessful against a company, may be extremely costly to the company and its insurers, may have significant reputational implications and could potentially impact the company's access to capital."

Geopolitics: Arctic shipping changes, migration pressures

Climate change is having an impact onshipping in the Arctic, the report said, along with changing geopoliticsaround military readiness, migration and aid.

"With the rapid retreat of sea ice in the Arctic Ocean and increased physical access to the region and its resources, the Arctic is now on the world stage," the report said.

The icebreaker Tor (R) is shown at the port of Sabetta at the Kara Sea shoreline on the Yamal Peninsula in the Arctic Circle, some 2,450 kilometres from Moscow, in 2016. Climate change is expected to open the Arctic to more shipping, with geopolitical implications. (Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP/Getty Images)

The extent of summer sea ice in the Canadian Arctic has been declining between five and 20 per cent in the last decade, the report said, including in areas spanning the Northwest Passage.

The shipping distance between New York and Shanghai through the Northwest Passage is about 20 per cent shorter than through the Panama Canal, a popular current route for the container traffic underpinning global commerce, according to the report.

While new shipping routes are set to open, it remains unclear how these spaces will be governed and regulated. "Canada's transboundary marine and freshwater agreements were not created with climate change in mind," the report said.

WATCH | Antigonish, N.S., aims to become Canada's 1st net-zero emissions community:

Antigonish, N.S., aims to become Canadas 1st net-zero emissions community

3 years ago
Duration 1:59
Antigonish, N.S., wants to become Canada's first net-zero emissions community. It already gets 84 per cent of its energy from renewable sources including wind and solar, which it plans on expanding.

The integrity of military basesand equipmentcould also be at risk from climate change.

While the U.S. has identified its military assets and operations most vulnerable to climate changeas a basis for setting priorities, Canada has not, the report said.

Increased natural disasters and crop failures in the world's poorest countries are also likely to trigger increased migration flows and more demands for aid, it said, noting that recent studies project a 50 per cent increase in displacement risks with each additional degree in Celsius of warming.

A silver lining in tourism, agriculture?

Agriculture in parts of the Prairies could get a boostfrom climate change due to a longer growing season, officials said, adding that tourism in the Far North and other regions could benefit from warmer temperatures.

They stressed, however, that the drawbacks far outweigh the benefits.

WATCH | Climate change makes invasive moth caterpillars a bigger problem:

Climate change makes invasive moth caterpillars a bigger problem

3 years ago
Duration 2:02
LDD moth caterpillars, once known as gypsy moth caterpillars, have invaded forests and parks in Ontario and some parts of Quebec, and climate change is turning them into a bigger problem.

It's unclear exactly how much new land could be opened to farming as temperatures warm or how much climate change could improve yields in some northerly areas, officials said, especially as flooding, heat waves and pestilence areexpected to get worse.

Even these silver linings could prove to be a "double-edged sword," said Catherine LafleurofNatural Resources Canada.

"Last-chance tourism" such as Canadians travelling to see icebergs or polar bears in the Far North "while those are still available" could increase, she said.

But winter tourism such asskiing "could take a big hit," Lafleur said, noting that some ski resort operators are starting to leveragetheir facilities for summer activities in the face of warming winters.

"Planning ahead is key in terms of realizing potential benefits," she said.

Add some good to your morning and evening.

The environment is changing. This newsletter is your weekly guide to what were doing about it.

...

The next issue of What on Earth will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.