Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Growing up, I often heard a phrase from many of the elders in the very small, rural, indigenous community I grew up in, which was that for young people, particularly children, this planet and this place and this earth is more theirs than it is ours. We have a responsibility to that principle, to know that those who act and those who are stewarding this land have a real and very tangible connection to the next generation and the fact that they'll have to deal with many of these things.
I am a more recently elected member of Parliament. I'm sure our witnesses could sympathize with the many stories I hear about the fear of young people. At every school I go to speak to or visit, a young person comes up to me to ask whether enough is being done to make sure that they can have a livable planet. They fear that the smoke and wildfires that took over much of Canada last year will become the new norm; that the historic floods that we're seeing in some parts of the region, like those that destroyed our supply chains in British Columbia, could become the new norm; that the immensely dry conditions that threaten cities like Fort McMurray, Yellowknife and much of Edmonton will continue to get worse.
It's a serious question and one that I think we owe young people the most credible answer to, even if that answer is one of failure. I also do believe these audits, most particularly the audit presented today, make clear where we are and where we need to go.
I'm disappointed in a few facts. The report suggests that we've now had 10 climate mitigation plans since 1990, and Canada's current emissions are significantly higher than what they were in 1990. What we heard today, as admitted by the members of the government and by Environment Canada, is that there is a lack of centralized authority.
To the contention of the member from the Privy Council who said that they are the ones who act in the centralizing work of institutions, the audit makes clear that we're not seeing any tangible changes. It's clear to me—and I think it's clear to Environment and Climate Change Canada—that Canada is going to miss its target for reducing emissions. Again, these are the things we have to tell young people.
In addition to this, in December of 2022, the department revised the emissions reduction that is expected from the 2030 plan from achieving 36.4% below the 2005 level to 34%, missing the 2030 target by an even larger margin. This is, in my mind, the moving of goalposts. It doesn't seek to actually reduce emissions but tries to prevent what would be a better level of accountability. The audit suggests that only 45% of the measures in the plan had an implementation deadline.
My question is to the audit team. What measures did not have an implementation deadline that are of most importance to actually achieving emissions reductions, please?