Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Tara Shannon, assistant deputy minister of the Canadian Wildlife Service at Environment and Climate Change Canada.
My colleagues and I are happy to meet with the committee today to discuss ECCC's management action plan in response to the commissioner's audit recommendations regarding the implementation of the Species at Risk Act and Canada's greenhouse gas emission regulations. I'm joined today by Derek Hermanutz, director general of economic analysis; and Mark Cauchi, director general of energy and transportation at ECCC.
The objective of audit report two, as the commissioner noted, focused on whether ECCC, Fisheries and Oceans Canada and Parks Canada met the Species at Risk Act timeline requirements to develop recovery documents and related implementation reports and whether the objectives set out in said documents were met. The objective of audit report three focused on whether Environment and Climate Change Canada took a timely and evidence-based approach to informing the Minister of Environment and Climate Change's recommendations to apply the Species at Risk Act's discretionary power provisions for terrestrial wildlife species on non-federal lands.
The department acknowledges the recommendations for improvement and is taking action to address them. The department is committed to ensuring the efficient implementation of the Species at Risk Act across all programming areas, which includes the use of the safety net and emergency order provisions on non-federal lands, as appropriate, and the timely development of recovery documents for species at risk.
The Species at Risk report findings show that more must be done to halt and reverse biodiversity loss. Canada is committed to working collaboratively with provinces, territories, indigenous peoples and stakeholders to protect and recover species at risk across the country and to fulfilling its obligations under SARA.
In terms of report five, the objective of the audit report focused on whether regulations administered by ECCC achieved their GHG emissions reduction targets. The department appreciates the commissioner's three recommendations, and we have implemented action plans to address them.
Although Canada has made significant progress in implementing GHG regulations as well as all the other measures in the 2022 emissions reduction plan, achieving our 2030 target of 40% to 45% reductions from 2005 levels and reaching net zero by 2050 will require significant effort to accelerate emissions reductions. These goals are being supported by an all-of-government approach, which includes a wide range of policy instruments, ranging from regulations to using federal procurement to transform markets and providing direct financial support to decarbonization projects, and the numerous investment tax credits announced in the last fall economic update and budget 2023.
We are working to integrate the three recommendations from the commissioner into our work as we implement our current regulations and develop new ones. The department is committed to continuing to improve our ability to model the impacts of new measures and to monitoring and reporting the impacts of existing measures. This includes improving how we use sensitivity analysis in our modelling.
In regard to the findings on methane, ECCC also committed to continue engaging with British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan on the ongoing implementation of those provinces' methane regulations. Ensuring that provincial actions deliver expected results is a key feature of any equivalency agreement we enter into. This information will also be important when the existing agreements expire and renewal is discussed.
In our action plan we also committed to addressing the commissioner's third recommendation to use the most recent measurement-based data to improve the accuracy of the oil and gas sector methane emissions we publish in the national inventory report. This commitment was made in our most recent report.
We are happy to respond to any questions.
Thank you.