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Environment committee Ms. Peace, this leads me to my second question. For a number of years, the central administrations of the United States and Canada have not taken climate change action, although regional initiatives have been implemented in some American states and some Canadian provinces
November 24th, 2009Committee meeting
Bernard BigrasBloc
Environment committee to a continental response to climate change, you would put down a couple of conditions. You said, for example, that the caps have to be fixed in absolute terms, similar between countries. You said all gases sectors, fossil fuels, have to be included. There would have to be offset standards
November 24th, 2009Committee meeting
David McGuintyLiberal
Environment committee ; and that these changes represent a major threat to international security and are already having harmful consequences all over the world. That conference went on to set a target of a 20% reduction in carbon dioxide emissions below 1988 levels by 2005. Those were heady days in the climate change
November 24th, 2009Committee meeting
Dennis Tirpak
Environment committee to mirror the direction the United States has gone in, including under the Bush regime, where they've put together national security with climate change. I'm wondering if you could give us a little bit more detail out of this framework of the climate change act, various initiatives
November 19th, 2009Committee meeting
Linda DuncanNDP
Environment committee What would you consider as a fair contribution so that the industrialized countries would help the developing countries in the context of the climate change adaptation? It is expressed as a GDP percentage. Is it 3 to 4% of the GDP? What kind of contribution
November 19th, 2009Committee meeting
Bernard BigrasBloc
Environment committee I can appreciate that. I can see already in the discussion that there can be very different regional effects when we discuss what to do about climate change. I come from the southernmost riding in all of Canada. Of course, the auto industry is king there, so possible effects
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
Jeff WatsonConservative
Environment committee Perhaps I'll come back to my question. I don't think we heard answers there. With respect to the notion of adapting to global climate change, could you outline what either one of your organizations is doing in the north to support, facilitate, adopt, and advance climate change
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
Peter BraidConservative
Environment committee Well, before we get into the budget, I really would like to stick to the issue of climate change and Bill C-311, so if you find that the Assembly of First Nations did in fact provide any kind of written response to the government's climate change plan, could you send
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
Stephen WoodworthConservative
Environment committee Well, just a quick comment, then. I want to thank both witnesses for being here, but Bill C-311 is a discussion. Canada has very aggressive targets. Our position is that all the major emitters have to be part of a new international agreement on climate change. That includes
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
Mark WarawaConservative
Environment committee interesting, because climate change is happening. There is consensus, both internationally and within this committee, that climate change is happening. It's very important to hear your perspective of how that is affecting first nations, Inuit, and Métis. I appreciate what you've shared
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
Mark WarawaConservative
Environment committee Certainly, Mr. Chair. I will make that direct connection immediately. Mr. Tulurialik, I understand you were part of the Inuvik Declaration on Arctic Climate Change and Global Action and that you participated in the youth summit on northern climate change this past August
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
Linda DuncanNDP
Environment committee Thank you very much for the question, sir. First of all, we need to come to terms with the fact that global warming and climate change are actually happening. It's man-made. It's not something that nature has created. We have to admit that climate change is a reality, global
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
Chief Bill Erasmus
Environment committee I have another question on northern development. We know that a result of climate change is that you see the ice melting in the north. This has two consequences. First, a new shipping channel, a sea route, will be created in the north. Second, it seems that the melting ice
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
Bernard BigrasBloc
Environment committee a plan for climate change for Canada provided to you by the Government of Canada? Do you have a plan for climate change today? Have you seen one? If you do, could you share it with us?
November 17th, 2009Committee meeting
David McGuintyLiberal
Environment committee of doing so—because as climate change continues to occur, we really must factor it into risk assessment and risk management formulas. Otherwise we're going to be missing a very essential component of what's happening ecologically and climatologically. So I think we definitely need to do that.
October 6th, 2011Committee meeting
Christopher Majka