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Good afternoon, and welcome to Globe Climate, a newsletter about climate change, environment and resources in Canada.
We are all aware of the increase in food costs because we can feel it in our pockets, especially on top of other price increases. The annual headline inflation rate was 3.4 per cent in December, while food prices rose at a rate of 4.7 per cent. Experts say the main factors that have driven grocery prices up over the past couple of years are the COVID-19 pandemic, global conflicts and – you guessed it – climate change.
All three have caused significant stresses on the grocery supply chain. But how exactly does that work? We outline the process here, from wheat fields to weekly flyers.
Now, let’s catch you up on other news.
Noteworthy reporting this week:
- Farming: Three chefs show how regenerative agriculture ends up on your plate
- Biodiversity: IVF breakthrough gives northern white rhinos fragile hope for a future
- Space: Aided by Canadian hardware, Odysseus lunar lander aims to make space history
- Mining: Alberta regulator will hear Australian company’s revived plan for a controversial coal mine
- Pollution: Glencore urged to support International Joint Commission to resolve cross-border mining dispute
- Conservation: Changes to Ontario species law would speed loss of protected habitat, scientists say
- Urban boundaries: Some farmland development restored in new Ontario omnibus bill
- Marine life: Proposed national marine conservation area in northern Ontario could soon be protected
- Life and wellness: Looking after yourself and looking after the environment
- This week from The Narwhal, read the joint investigation reported with The Globe.
A deeper dive
B.C.’s multimillion-dollar mining problem
Jeffrey Jones is The Globe’s reporter for environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) and sustainable finance. For this week’s deeper dive, he talks about a joint investigation we did with The Narwhal.
Francesca Fionda covers mining for The Narwhal, the online news source that puts the environment front and centre. In recent years, mining has taken on a new lustre, as Canada and the world look to critical minerals as the foundation for a low-carbon economy. These are the ingredients – copper, lithium, molybdenum and a host of others –needed for batteries used in transport and energy storage,
Fionda makes it her business to keep in touch with industry professionals, policy reform advocates, environmentalists, government officials, members of small communities and First Nations leaders, many of them in British Columbia. She’s found that as excitement builds over mining’s new era, many of those people worry about a lingering problem: spent mines that have yet to be cleaned up, some leaking toxic waste for decades. How can the industry move forward while an ugly problem from past booms remains unsolved?
“A major concern was the multibillion-dollar cleanup costs of past and current mines and a gap in funds held by the province as a security,” Fionda says. “Without enough money put aside for cleanup, the environment is at risk and taxpayers could be left covering the costs.”
She spent several months investigating those problems – and the risks that remain as the critical minerals rush gathers steam. As it happens, her work fit neatly into a couple of interesting initiatives in the publishing field.
First, Emma Gilchrist, the Narhwal’s editor-in-chief, and Ryan Macdonald, The Globe and Mail’s energy and environment editor, had been discussing ways to combine forces to bring our publications’ respective readers deeper insight into major issues. At the same time, The Globe team was beginning a series of stories exploring Canada’s prospects in the world of critical minerals.
This is where Globe data journalist Chen Wang and I came in. The two of us were on the team that produced Hustle in the Oil Patch, an award-winning 2018 investigation into the crisis of underfunded cleanup liability in Western Canada’s oil and gas industry. We were able to use that experience to enhance Fionda’s reporting, in the story and in the accompanying data and graphics, as part of the first-ever collaboration between our organizations.
The resulting investigative piece, “B.C’s multimillion-dollar mining problem,” was published last week in both The Globe and The Narwhal, along with stunning visuals from our photo and graphics teams. It pinpoints where the gaps are in B.C. when it comes to the billions of dollars set aside for mine cleanup, and offers up some possible solutions. We think it’s worth your time.
- Jeff
What else you missed
- Federal government scales back carbon price rebates for small businesses
- China’s coal power approvals in 2023 rose, putting climate targets at risk
- GST, HST on Ottawa’s carbon price could raise billions over next seven years, budget watchdog says
- Eby ‘profoundly worried’ about B.C. fire season as billions prepped for contingencies
- Kayakers paddle in Death Valley after rains replenish lake in one of Earth’s driest spots
- Maple Leaf Foods combining meat and plant protein businesses into one
- How do whales sing? Lab experiments suggest their voice boxes have a unique feature
- EU carbon border tax will do little to cut emissions, ADB study says
Opinion and analysis
Kelly Cryderman: Danielle Smith breaks pledged tax cut while promising the moon for Alberta’s Heritage Fund
Jatin Nathwani and Ann Fitzgerald: Nuclear waste holds the key to a secure and carbon-free future
Jennifer Keesmaat: Public lands can help unlock the housing crisis – and our governments hold the key
Eric Reguly: Brussels faces long battle with its farmers as agricultural powerhouse Ukraine seeks EU membership
Green Investing
Opinion: Is ESG investing counterproductive?
Take an insurance company as an example. It may rank well on sustainability metrics, but it can’t really get much greener. On the other hand, when a brown firm such as a heavy construction materials supplier is backed into a corner by an increased cost of capital, it may lean further into its existing high-pollution operations or even cut corners on pollution mitigation.
Rather than avoiding brown firms altogether, research suggests that tilting – holding brown firms that have taken corrective action – may be more effective at reducing externalities. Read the full piece today
- Number cruncher: Five renewable energy stocks with attractive valuations
- Globe Advisor weekly newsletter: Why biodiversity is the newest wave for ESG
- Mining: Human-rights groups decry rising trend of corporate SLAPP lawsuits
Making waves
This week’s Making Waves highlights an opportunity for young people in Canada. A partnership between Change Course, Canada’s National Observer and Stand.earth, the Climate Finance Scholarship Contest is open to anyone aged 18 to 30.
Applicants are invited to respond to prompts with a written essay or multimedia submission. See full contest rules and details here.
Do you know an engaged individual? Someone who represents the real engines pursuing change in the country? E-mail us at GlobeClimate@globeandmail.com to tell us about them.
Photo of the week
Guides and Explainers
- Want to learn to invest sustainably? We have a class for that: Green Investing 101 newsletter course for the climate-conscious investor. Not sure you need help? Take our quiz to challenge your knowledge.
- We’ve rounded up our reporters’ content to help you learn about what a carbon tax is, what happened at COP28 and just generally how Canada will change because of climate change.
- We have ways to make your travelling more sustainable and if you like to read, here are books to help the environmentalist in you grow, as well as a downloadable e-book of Micro Skills - Little Steps to Big Change.
Catch up on Globe Climate
- The success story of a bear named Captain Hook
- Studying winter air pollution from the top of the CN Tower
- Canadian scientists seek the future of batteries
- Why does winter look different than it used to?
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