http://www.thestar.com/News/article/182027

Key office that invests in green projects in developing countries down
to two staff

February 15, 2007
Allan Woods
Ottawa Bureau

OTTAWA-The Conservative government has gutted a key office set up under
the Kyoto protocol that allows Canadian companies to offset greenhouse
gas emissions by investing in green projects in developing countries,
the Toronto Star has learned.

Foreign Affairs, which runs the program, refused repeated requests by
the Star for current staffing levels in the Clean Development Mechanism
office, compared with staff numbers before 2006, when the federal Tories
came to power. But those who have worked with the office said it has
dropped to "one or two" people, from about 25 people in the fall of
2005.

"(The Conservative government) started laying them off almost
immediately when they got into power last spring. I think by the summer
the place was gutted," said Dirk Brinkman, head of a Vancouver-based
reforestation company that develops such projects.

He said the office helped its counterparts in developing countries and
worked with companies here as well.

The Conservatives have long complained about plans by their Liberal
predecessors to invest in "hot air credits" abroad. The Tories also have
criticized the idea that Canada could clean up the atmosphere here by
funding environmentally sound projects in Russia or South America.

The Kyoto accord allows developed countries to trade emissions credits
with other developed countries. It also allows developed nations to fund
green projects in developing countries.

Canada's office was set up in 1998 to work on the latter initiative. The
Kyoto tool is to help countries like China and India avoid building
their economies in the way developed countries have done, with
coal-based technologies, said Stewart Elgie, a law professor with the
University of Ottawa's Institute of the Environment.

"It's essential that poor countries grow their economies in low-emission
ways and the clean development mechanism is the way to achieve that," he
said.

The Conservatives came under fire last year for removing all references
to climate change projects and the Kyoto accord from the Environment
Canada website. The government was also criticized for cancelling
funding 15 climate change programs, including the popular One-Tonne
Challenge and the EnerGuide home efficiency program. It said the
programs did not produce results.

A Tory source told the Star that, while a few projects under the
emissions credit banner might have been in the early stages of
development when the Conservatives took power, nothing was "ready to
go."

"They were pushing for it, but they were not in place," the source said
of the projects the office was working on early last year. "I've seen
one project that could look like a CDM project, but it wasn't clearly
identified as such."

Any request for funding related to such a project was a non-starter in
the government's eyes, the source said.

"Clearly, the indication was that if you want government money for that,
it will not go ahead." John Drexhage of the Ottawa-based International
Institute for Sustainable Development said that so far, the government
has only said it will not buy emissions credits directly as a
government.

"The government has yet to clarify whether it's going to allow industry
to participate in global trading," he said. "I would hope that they not
take away that option."

Even so, the government has effectively penalized companies looking to
use the credit program to reduce their greenhouse gases by preventing
those firms from tapping into the expert assistance. Drexhage said help
is also available from private firms.

Brinkman said his reforestation company has up to $100 million in
projects under development that would lead to "millions of tonnes of
tradable (emissions) credits." The company is developing such projects
for companies in countries including Spain and Italy, he said.

At a special committee examining the government's environmental
legislation this week, Drexhage raised the case of 45 such projects in
Ukraine and Russia. He said the projects have achieved greenhouse gas
reductions equalling 93 megatonnes through initiatives focused on energy
efficiency and capturing "fugitive emissions" from the oil and gas
sectors.

"When it comes to climate change and greenhouse gas emissions, not only
do the emissions not have borders, neither do the emissions reductions,"
he said. "From a global environmental perspective, a tonne of CO2
reduced here is the same as a tonne of CO2 reduced in Brazil or anywhere
else."



-- 
Darryl McMahon
It's your planet.  If you won't look after it, who will?

The Emperor's New Hydrogen Economy (now in print and eBook)
http://www.econogics.com/TENHE/

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