http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/12/13

Published on Tuesday, December 13, 2011 by Reuters

Canada First Nation to Pull Out of Kyoto Protocol

by David Ljunggren and Randall Palmer

Canada on Monday became the first country to announce it would 
withdraw from the Kyoto protocol on climate change, dealing a 
symbolic blow to the already troubled global treaty.

Environment Minister Peter Kent broke the news on his return from 
talks in Durban, where countries agreed to extend Kyoto for five 
years and hammer out a new deal forcing all big polluters for the 
first time to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

Canada, a major energy producer which critics complain is becoming a 
climate renegade, has long complained Kyoto is unworkable precisely 
because it excludes so many significant emitters.

"As we've said, Kyoto for Canada is in the past ... We are invoking 
our legal right to formally withdraw from Kyoto," Kent told reporters.

The right-of-center Conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen 
Harper, which has close ties to the energy sector, says Canada would 
be subject to penalties equivalent to C$14 billion ($13.6 billion) 
under the terms of the treaty for not cutting emissions by the 
required amount by 2012.

"To meet the targets under Kyoto for 2012 would be the equivalent of 
either removing every car truck, all-terrain vehicle, tractor, 
ambulance, police car and vehicle off every kind of Canadian road," 
said Kent.

Environmentalists quickly blasted Kent for his comments.

"It's a national disgrace. Prime Minister Harper just spat in the 
faces of people around the world for whom climate change is 
increasingly a life and death issue," said Graham Saul of Climate 
Action Network Canada.

Kent did not give details on when Ottawa would pull out of a treaty 
he said could not work. Canada kept quiet during the Durban talks so 
as not to be a distraction, he added.

"The writing on the wall for Kyoto has been recognized by even those 
countries which are engaging in a second commitment," he said. 
Kyoto's first phase was due to expire at the end of 2012 but has now 
been extended until 2017.

Kent said Canada would work toward a new global deal obliging all 
major nations to cut output of greenhouse gases China and India are 
not bound by Kyoto's current targets.

The Conservatives took power in 2006 and quickly made clear they 
would not stick to Canada's Kyoto commitments on the grounds it would 
cripple the economy and the energy sector.

The announcement will do little to help Canada's international 
reputation. Green groups awarded the country their Fossil of the Year 
award for its performance in Durban.

"Our government is abdicating its international responsibilities. 
It's like where the kid in school who knows he's going to fail the 
class, so he drops it before that happens," said Megan Leslie of the 
opposition New Democrats.

Canada is the largest supplier of oil and natural gas to the United 
States and is keen to boost output of crude from Alberta's oil sands, 
which requires large amounts of energy to extract.

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) said all major 
emitters had to agree to cuts so that Canada did not put itself at a 
disadvantage.

Canada's former Liberal government signed up to Kyoto, which dictated 
a cut in emissions to 6 percent below 1990 levels by 2012. By 2009 
emissions were 17 percent above the 1990 levels, in part because of 
the expanding tar sands development.

Kent said the Liberals should not have signed up to a treaty they had 
no intention of respecting.

The Conservatives say emissions should fall by 17 percent of 2005 
levels by 2020, a target that CAPP president David Collyer said would 
oblige the energy sector to make sacrifices.

"It's a stretch and we'd be kidding ourselves if we said it wasn't," 
he told Reuters.

($1 = 1.03 Canadian dollars)

(Additional reporting by Louise Egan in Ottawa and Jeffrey Jones in 
Calgary; editing by Christopher Wilson)

© 2011 Reuters

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