National Indigenous Peoples’ Day 2023
National Indigenous People’s Day offers an opportunity to work for a healthier and more sustainable environment built on Indigenous Knowledges.
National Indigenous People’s Day offers an opportunity to work for a healthier and more sustainable environment built on Indigenous Knowledges.
This webinar is an invitation to consider pathways into actively restoring a respectful relationship with the forests that sustain us all. Featuring Valine Brown, Darcy Lindberg, and Executive Director Hannah Askew.
Learners of all ages are invited to this webinar that will help us reimagine our relationships with all living beings. Join us on September 10 at noon!
How can we take large-scale climate action to provide a healthy world for future generations? Join author Seth Klein and Sierra Club BC’s climate justice campaigner Anjali Appadurai as they discuss the obstacles to meaningful climate action and what we can do to overcome them.
Horgan government pushes back climate plan by a year
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 17, 2020
Unceded Coast Salish Territories (VANCOUVER, BC) — British Columbia is far off track from meeting its 2030 climate targets, according to a government report released today. The B.C. Government published the 2020 Climate Change Accountability Report, the first legally-required update on the province’s progress on meeting its climate targets. The report reveals that the gap to B.C.’s legislated 2030 target has increased significantly, from 5.5 megatons in the 2019 report to between 7.2 and 11.2 megatons, meaning that the gap has grown from 25 percent when the plan was first announced to as much as 44 percent.
The government revealed that the plan to close that gap would be delayed by as much as a year. When CleanBC was unveiled in 2018, the government promised to complete their plan to achieve the 2030 target within 18 to 24 months, a deadline which expired earlier this month. Further emphasizing that the province has been headed in the wrong direction, B.C. unveiled a new 2025 target of 16 percent below 2007 emissions. While ambitious given where the province is now, this target is much weaker than the province’s former 2016 and 2020 targets.
“Clearly this is a major setback for the government’s plan to meet our climate targets,” said Sven Biggs, Canadian Oil and Gas Program Director at Stand.earth. “However, we believe that if the Horgan government is transparent about what climate science tells us is necessary, and can demonstrate that all sectors of the economy are doing their part to get us back on track, that British Columbians will support the policies necessary to meet this challenge.”
The gap between the emissions reductions covered by CleanBC and our legally-binding 2030 emissions target has widened because of continued emissions growth in 2018, lead by heavy duty trucks, oil and gas exploration and off-road industrial transport, and also because of technical changes to the way we calculate the impact of the shipping industry going back to 2007.
“Premier Horgan has said that LNG projects will only go ahead if they fit into our climate plan, and this report makes it absolutely clear that they do not,” said Andrew Radzik, Energy Campaigner for Georgia Strait Alliance. “We cannot expand fracking and go ahead with the unbuilt LNG Canada project and still meet our climate goals. This is a moment of truth for the Premier: he can be a real leader, taking the decisions we need for a stable climate, or he can support fracking and LNG. We no longer have time to pretend we can do both.”
The report shows that while other industrial sectors have reduced their emissions, oil and gas emissions continue to grow at an alarming rate and now emit more climate pollution than all other industries in the province combined.
“It is clear that if we continue to allow the growth of oil and gas extraction in this province we won’t ever be able to get climate pollution under control” said Anjali Appadurai, Climate Justice Campaigner with Sierra Club BC. “The sooner we begin a serious conversation about the transition away from fracking and all other forms of fossil fuels, the less disruptive and painful the transition will be for workers, our communities, and the most vulnerable among us.”
Although frustrated by decade-long delays in climate action, environmental organizations emphasized that today’s report and new target are essential elements of getting the province on track to achieving its climate goals and protecting British Columbians from climate change.
“As alarming as today’s report is, it demonstrates the importance of B.C.’s Climate Change Accountability Act,” said Matt Hulse, Lawyer, Ecojustice. “The Act requires government to be transparent about the size of the climate challenges we face, so that the government can engage in an honest conversation with British Columbians about the work that needs to be done to address the climate crisis.”
“B.C.’s new 2025 target shows why setting targets is not enough; accountability for meeting those targets is essential. B.C. missed more ambitious targets in 2016 and 2020, and instead increased our emissions,” said Andrew Gage, Staff Lawyer, West Coast Environmental Law. “However, this new 2025 target, together with strong science-based plans and regular progress updates, can help us to answer the tough questions about where those emission reductions will come from and get us on track.”
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About
Ecojustice goes to court and uses the power of the law to defend nature, combat climate change, and fight for a healthy environment. Its strategic, innovative public interest lawsuits lead to legal precedents that deliver lasting solutions to Canada’s most urgent environmental problems. As Canada’s largest environmental law charity, Ecojustice operates offices in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, Ottawa, and Halifax.
Georgia Strait Alliance advocates for long-term, climate-forward solutions to marine and environmental threats to the Salish Sea. We acknowledge that our work takes place on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territories of the Coast Salish peoples.
Sierra Club BC is an environmental non-profit working to steward abundant ecosystems and a stable climate, while building resilient, equitable communities by reconnecting children and youth with nature, supporting grassroots-led climate action, and advocating for old-growth protection and a rapid shift away from fossil fuels.
Stand.earth (formerly ForestEthics) is an international nonprofit environmental organization with offices in Canada and the United States that is known for its groundbreaking research and successful corporate and citizens engagement campaigns to create new policies and industry standards in protecting forests, advocating the rights of Indigenous Peoples, and protecting the climate.
West Coast Environmental Law is a non-profit group of environmental lawyers and strategists dedicated to safeguarding the environment through law. Working with communities, non-governmental organizations, the private sector and all levels of government, West Coast is transforming environmental decision-making and strengthening legal protection for the environment through collaborative legal strategies that bridge Indigenous and Canadian law.
Media contacts:
Andrew Radzik, Energy Campaigner | Georgia Strait Alliance
andrew@georgiastrait.org, 778-896-4441
Anjali Appadurai, Climate Justice Campaigner | Sierra Club BC
Anjali@sierraclub.bc.ca, 604-328-6443
Sven Biggs, Canadian Oil and Gas Program Director | Stand.earth
sven@stand.earth, 778-882-8354
Andrew Gage, Staff Lawyer | West Coast Environmental Law
agage@wcel.org, 250-412-9784
Emily Chan, Communications Strategist | Ecojustice
echan@ecojustice.ca, 1-800-926-7744 x277
Photo by Leila Darwish
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 9, 2020
Organizations and concerned individuals have signed a letter addressed to Dr. Bonnie Henry urging B.C.’s Provincial Health Officer to listen to Wet’suwet’en women and support the health and safety of their communities by shutting down LNG Canada and Coastal GasLink facilities and work camps amid COVID-19 outbreaks.
As stated in the letter Wet’suwet’en women sent to Dr. Bonnie Henry on November 30, these work camps do not have the capacity to isolate all COVID-19 positive workers and often send some home to cohabitate with elders and other community members.
“As a result of ongoing colonialism and racism in the health care system, Indigenous peoples are at increased risk with COVID-19 due to underlying health concerns. The loss of elders and knowledge-keepers poses enormous intergenerational cultural impacts for these communities,” says the letter signed by multiple organizations and individuals.
“Keeping these work camps open only perpetuates the harm of colonization and puts economic gain ahead of the health and cultural wellbeing of these communities. Respectfully, we request that the B.C. government prioritize the health of Wet’suwet’en peoples and respect their ask to shut down work camps due to increasing COVID-19 concerns.”
You can read the full letter here. It has been signed by:
Sierra Club BC
Council of Canadians
My Sea to Sky
Wilderness Committee
Dr. Tim K. Takaro, Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University
Charlene Aleck, Tsleil-Waututh Nation Sacred Trust Initiative
Christy Ferguson, Executive Director, Greenpeace Canada
Stand.earth
350.org
Watershed Sentinel Educational Society
RAVEN Trust
PIPE UP Network
Glasswaters Foundation
Center for Sustainable Economy
Gulf Islands Front Lines
Our Time Vancouver
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Read the Wet’suwet’en media advisory here
Read the Wet’suwet’en women’s letter to Dr. Bonnie Henry here
Read Sierra Club BC’s letter to Dr. Bonnie Henry here
Media contacts:
Jen Wickham | Gidimt’en Checkpoint Media Coordinator
778-210-0067
Sleydo’, Molly Wickham | Gidimt’en Checkpoint Spokesperson
yintahaccess@gmail.com
Hannah Askew | Sierra Club BC Executive Director
hannah@sierraclub.bc.ca
Tła̱lita’la̱s~Karissa Glendale | Sierra Club BC Forest Relations Coordinator
tlalitalas@sierraclub.bc.ca
Registered charitable number: 11914 9797 RR0001
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