Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
This is obviously an important amendment. I'd like to formally move Liberal amendment 21.1 and speak to it for several minutes. I would appreciate my colleagues' indulgence.
It's a very important amendment, Mr. Chair, and I think it will complete a series of three amendments we've put forward to try to piece together a comprehensive Canadian approach to climate change actions and certainly greenhouse gas reductions as they apply to our largest industrial emitters.
I'd like to go through the amendment almost page by page and break it down in terms of its scope and its purpose.
The first thing I would say is that obviously the purpose of the purpose paragraph is pretty clear for Canadians who might want to read it and for our colleagues here, but I think the key first part of this amendment, Mr. Chair, is that it will create Canada's national carbon budget and will create other carbon budgets that would flow from Canada's national carbon budget.
It's fairly specific in setting out, under proposed subsection 103.02(1), a definition of what the national carbon budget is. For each year from 2008 to 2012, it defines a budget that corresponds to Canada's domestic greenhouse gas emissions levels in 1990 less 6%, which of course is our Kyoto commitment and our Kyoto target.
For 2020, 2035, and 2050 a carbon budget would also be developed by the minister, which would be less than the previous year's budget and would have to correspond with Canada's domestic greenhouse gas emissions levels in 1990, less 20%—as it goes on to explain—by 2020, less 35% by 2035, and less 60% to 80% by 2050. That is the core target; that would be Canada's national carbon budget going forward.
Under proposed subsection 103.02(2), this amendment would also create for Canada sectoral carbon budgets as a subset or a portion of the national carbon budget, and of course it gives the power to the minister to determine who would form part of each sector, something I'll come back to in a moment in the amendment.
Proposed subsection 103.02(3) then introduces the notion of an individual carbon budget. Individual carbon budgets are portions of these sectoral carbon budgets, and again a subset of the national carbon budget. Individual carbon budgets would be determined by the minister for each large industrial emitter, but proposed subsection 103.02(3) also gives flexibility to the minister in the future for any other person that the minister might consider to be responsible for a part of Canada's overall greenhouse gas emissions.
Following this proposed subsection 103.02(3) are a number of core attributes that speak to the question of allocation and how the minister might allocate these individual carbon budgets. They deal with a series of very important issues raised for us by expert witnesses, who spoke to the salient features of a strong trading system, in particular, that would reflect some important attributes.
The first is credit for early action. We want to make sure in this country that those large industrial emitters who just started doing it.... There are thousands around the country. We're not talking about the smaller ones in this case; we're talking about the dozens and dozens of our large industrial emitter group, of about 700 that have also taken a lot of early action.
They have done so because they subscribe to the Kyoto Protocol and they understand the targets. They've said they are going to do this because they are going to become more energy efficient and more competitive and because they recognize that we're moving into a carbon-constrained future. Proposed paragraph 103.02 (3)(a) talks about giving credit for early action to the person who has reduced greenhouse gas emissions between 1990 and the entry into force of this section. It reflects the work that's gone on since 1990.
The second thing it does in the allocation of the individual carbon budget is take into account that in some instances some of our large industrial emitters have many plants and many facilities. They are not single-facility or single-plant entities, so we need to leave some room here to adjust and to allocate on the basis that some of these actors, some of these large industrial emitters, can transfer their emission reductions from one setting to another. This is also a central tenet of those who are proposing, from the corporate sector in Canada, to see a robust trading system, which is why it's reflected here.
The third thing it does, Mr. Chair, is allow for comparisons between large industrial emitters, but more importantly between emitters in the same industrial sector. It is important to treat all these actors, these emitters, fairly. You treat them fairly by having regard to their economic growth compared with their sector's average economic growth to make sure it is adjusted accordingly. That's an important part of this amendment that I wanted to home in on from the beginning.
Proceeding through the amendment, the minister, at least six months before a national, sectoral, or individual carbon budget applying, would determine that budget, would publish the budget or give notice of it in the Canada Gazette, and then we would go on to empower the minister to make regulations to decide how we're going to calculate the individual carbon deficit in this case. The deficit is the amount of surplus emissions above the individual carbon budget allocated.
We also here are trying to introduce into Canadian society the concept that, just as we had a fiscal deficit that our government and other governments have struggled to deal with and have eliminated, we now need to introduce into Canadian society, in our view, the concept of a carbon deficit, because we are working towards and heading towards a carbon-constrained future. This, we think, would help to introduce this notion of carbon deficit into the parlance, into the working knowledge of not just the large industrial emitters but also Canadian society.
It goes on to give authority to the minister to issue carbon permits to those individual emitters.
Then we go into the second part, the core part of the amendment, under the heading “Climate Change Plan”. Here, we believe, it is desperately required that a climate change plan be prepared for Canada every year by May 31 from 2013 until 2050. That would reflect the end of our first commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol.
We go on in some detail to talk about what should be in the plan. What should be in Canada's climate change plan? You will see under proposed paragraph 103.03(1)(a), for example, a description of the measures that would be taken to ensure that our greenhouse gas emissions are equal to or less than our established national carbon budget. If we turn the page, we talk about the kinds of measures that ought to be included: regulated emission limits and performance standards; market-based mechanisms such as emissions trading or offsets; spending or fiscal measures or incentives that could be used; a just transition for workers; other cooperative measures or agreements with provinces, territories, or other governments.
Under what I call key accountability provisions in this amendment, we want to know under this national plan, this climate change plan, how many greenhouse gas reductions have actually occurred in a given year and how many are expected to occur in a given year. We want to compare that to the levels in our most up-to-date emissions inventory for Canada. We think Canadians should know what the projected greenhouse gas emission level in Canada for each year would be, taking into account these measures that I've just spoken to.
It also compels the government, Mr. Chair, to compare those levels with any international commitments that we have taken on, so we get to compare our performance and measure it against our international commitments.
It goes on, of course, under proposed paragraphs 103.03(1)(d), (e), and (f), to further detail other parts of the plan, including, under proposed paragraph 103.03(1)(f), a statement indicating whether each measure proposed in this climate change plan has been implemented by the date projected in the plan. We think this goes hand in hand with driving up environmental accountability for all governments—this government and any subsequent government that might follow—given the urgency of the climate change situation.
Under proposed section 103.05, we go on to define large industrial emitters. It's clear that under proposed paragraph 103.05(1)(a) emitters are those that are part of the electricity generation sector, including those that use fossil fuels to produce electricity; under proposed paragraph 103.05(1)(b), emitters are those that are part of the upstream oil and gas sector, including those that produce and transport fossil fuels, but we've excluded petroleum refiners and the distributors of natural gas; and under proposed paragraph 103.05(1)(c), the third category of large industrial emitters are energy-intensive industries, including large emitters that use a lot of energy from fossil fuels for their manufacturing processes.
Moving into part 5.2, Mr. Chair, I'm not going to go into too much detail, but you see quite an extensive amendment that puts forward an air quality action, basically a plan. The purpose of this plan is to protect the health of Canadians and improve the environment by addressing the anthropogenic deterioration of air quality. We talk about standards, which are clear—I'm assuming most members have read this amendment—and we go on from there to make a number of very precise and specific recommendations in order to improve air quality in Canada.
Those are my remarks, Mr. Chair. I think this is something that is deserving of serious debate. We have certainly tried to weave through this final amendment, in conjunction with the first two amendments.... Taken together, the three of them really do form, we think, a very viable plan for Canada's large industrial emitters to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, to get used to working in the context of an overall national carbon budget, to understand a sectoral carbon budget and of course their own individual carbon budgets. They're complemented and supplemented by some of the other measures we've put forward earlier—for example, a cap and trade system, maximum trading offshore, and so on, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much. Those are my remarks.