I can give you some examples of the money that was spent on international credits. I have in front of me a list representing at least $100 million that was used to purchase international credits.
I can go through the list and share it with you: $5 million went to the Canada-China consortium; $3.7 million to the State Development Planning Commission in China; $2 million to the State Power Corporation of China; $2.5 million to Global Investment Management for Panama; and $375,000 to Paraguay.
I could go on: $5 million was spent through the Asian Development Bank to be paid to the People's Republic, the Ministry of Science and Technology in China; $4.2 million through the World Bank to be paid to the regional areas of China, India, and other Asian countries; $2.3 million to the South Pacific; $3 million to Bangladesh; another $2 million to the State Power Corporation of China; $1.5 million to the Government of India.
I could go on and on. There are hundreds of millions of dollars in the purchase of international credits to be able.... Some of these projects actually didn't even earn us Kyoto credits.
The problem with this is not only that this money was not spent here at home on the priorities of Canadians, on things like cleaning up sewage in local communities.... We have over nineteen municipalities in Canada that are still dumping raw sewage in the ocean, and a small sewage facility can cost as little as $2 million.
When we see this kind of list, it is troubling that the priorities of the Liberal Party were to spend this money elsewhere, with no plan in place. Thirteen years and four plans later, there have been no reductions in greenhouse gases; and there is no national framework for air quality or greenhouse gases. This was the only plan: to buy international credits.
The troubling thing is that, increasingly, even those people involved in the Kyoto Protocol process and with the clean development mechanism are concerned at the lack of accountability around the transfer of funds from the Government of Canada based on these project proposals. Many times private accounting inspection firms are used to validate the projects through which money is transferred to third world countries, and these firms are then paid by the project participants. The actual project participants act both as the developers of the projects and as the project verifiers at the same time.
Daphne Wysham, who is the clean development mechanism expert, said that, “You're creating all kinds of incentives for corruption”, in giving a negative response.
Also, in this rush to try to certify emissions reductions through the clean development mechanism, particularly in India, the Centre for Science and Environment has uncovered breaches of Kyoto rules requiring developers to consult with local communities and to make sure there's actually accountability for these projects. His quote was, “We were really very disgusted.”
The concern is that these countries also have environmental priorities, and this is not the way for us to help them meet their priorities either. So there has been a lack of accountability, clearly, and a lack of priorities in this country, and we've done nothing to help these countries achieve their local priorities either.