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Good afternoon, and welcome to Globe Climate, a newsletter about climate change, environment and resources in Canada.
Is Canada keeping its promises on climate change? The Globe started to track the federal government’s progress in 2023, and it’s clear there is still a lot more work to be done.
Here is the status of several pledges made by Ottawa over the years. From oil and gas targets to climate financing and plastic waste promises, we’ve looked at it all. But if we did miss something, let us know.
Now, let’s catch you up on other news.
Noteworthy reporting this week:
- Nuclear power: Alberta’s Capital Power partners with Ontario Power Generation to build province’s first nuclear power reactor
- Climate data: With 2023 the hottest year on record, the world is now on track to eclipse 1.5 C above preindustrial levels
- Climate science: Loss of snow and impact on water supplies tied to climate change
- Extreme heat: A hot, parched South America gets ready for more tragedy in El Niño’s next act
- Conservation: Bison bounce back in the American West, giving Indigenous nations hope for restorations of their own
- Urban winter: How Ottawa snow groomer Dave Adams inspired a growing network of urban cross-country ski trails
- City parks: Vancouver’s move to abolish its unique parks board ‘awakens sleeping giant’
- From The Narwhal: First Nations are using artificial intelligence to help save salmon
A deeper dive
City of shadows
Alex Bozikovic is the architecture critic for The Globe and Mail. For this week’s deeper dive, he talks about how city planners are thinking about shadows.
They look like Mayan temples. Many of Toronto’s new condo apartment buildings have the same silhouette: They step down floor by floor, like one of the ziggurats at Chichén Itzá. This is because of a strong idea in contemporary city planning that shade is bad for our health. New buildings are forced into these odd forms to fit under imaginary lines – “angular planes” – so that they don’t cast shadows on adjacent streets, houses or parks.
But this idea seems strange to me. The rule in Toronto applies almost regardless of which direction the building faces. And as I learned while reporting my piece City of Shadows, the truth is that such policies are highly arbitrary and unsystematic – yet are widespread in the planning of our cities.
The idea of protecting light, especially on public spaces, has become conventional wisdom that’s rarely questioned.
But it’s time to do just that, especially because of what’s happening to the climate. Toronto’s policy – which is similar to those in many other places – dates back to a 1980 study of sun and wind in the city. Since then, the climate has changed significantly and will continue to do so. A federal climate scientist told me that Toronto had 12 uncomfortably hot days a year back then; now it has an average of 24, and in a generation it will have 36 or more.
It will soon be time to design our cities – as is done in many tropical and subtropical places – to provide more shade and more protection from the sun, not less. Maybe that time has already come.
– Alex
What else you missed
- Insured damage in Canada from severe weather exceeded $3-billion in 2023, insurance bureau says
- Conservation group buys out hunting rights in B.C. rainforest to protect wildlife
- Invasive plant found in Yukon could help clean mine water, even in the cold, research suggests
- Youth-led challenge of Ontario’s climate plan goes before province’s highest court
- Hopes remain for Rideau Canal Skateway opening after last year’s historic closure
- Hydrogen energy back in the vehicle conversation at CES 2024
- Largest great ape to ever live likely went extinct because of climate change, new study says
- Canmore resident group asks Alberta government for environmental assessment of developments
Opinion and analysis
Editorial board: From blocking to backing: Doug Ford’s conversion on renewable power
Kelly Cryderman: The provinces need to play ball with each other on electricity
Ruchi Kumar: The fight against climate change may demand that we work with the Taliban
Michael Bernstein: Where to now from COP28? Historic summit missed half the problem
Editorial board: Our climate future is dire. Prospects for change have never been better
Green Investing
Shareholder advocacy group alleges misleading disclosures on sustainable finance from Canada’s Big Five banks
A shareholder advocacy group that seeks to hold companies to account on climate action is calling on securities regulators to crack down on Canada’s Big Five banks, accusing them of misleading investors and the public with their sustainability claims. The charity, Investors for Paris Compliance, wants the watchdogs to force the banks to disclose the true emissions impact of their sustainable-finance divisions and make clear when activities do not advance net-zero goals. Sustainable finance reporter, Jeffrey Jones, has the full story.
- GE business to fill order for turbines to power Western Hemisphere’s largest wind project
- Leadership lab: DEI, sustainability pressures mounting on business leaders – and that’s a good thing
- Ottawa agrees climate adaptation saves money, but experts ask: Where’s the funding?
Making waves
Each week The Globe will profile a Canadian making a difference. This week we’re highlighting the work of Fred Witteveen supporting education as a tool for change.
Hi, I’m Fred Witteveen, chief executive officer at Children Believe, an organization driven by the belief that access to education is the most powerful tool children can use to change their world.
You may not associate championing girls’ education with slowing climate change, but research shows it is one of the most powerful solutions for reversing global warming. Ensuring access to education for girls is a more impactful climate solution than adopting electric cars or even scaling solar power.
Educated girls can strengthen climate strategies by inspiring leadership, encouraging environmentally sustainable consumption and contributing to meaningful change. Unfortunately, girls in developing communities face persistent gender discrimination and socio-economic barriers, including child marriage and early forced labour, which takes them out of the classroom.
We are working to remove barriers to education. In the past year alone, we’ve helped more than 285,000 girls obtain inclusive, quality education, and provided resources, tools and green skills development for jobs centred around sustainable action.
Canadians who want to make an impact should consider supporting organizations advancing education. These efforts do more than tackle the climate crisis. Educating girls contributes to the global economy, alleviates poverty and provides lasting, worldwide change.
– Fred
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
- In photos: 2023 was world’s hottest year on record, EU scientists confirm
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
- Reconciliation and critical minerals in the Ring of Fire
- This is what I learned as a youth delegate at COP28
- Natural disasters are making insurance more expensive and limited
- Young people want a seat at the COP28 table
We want to hear from you. E-mail us: GlobeClimate@globeandmail.com. Do you know someone who needs this newsletter? Send them to our Newsletters page.