Science

Tipping point? Experts say the Paris agreement changed the climate on climate

Five years after it was passed, the Paris agreement may finally be changing the climate on climate change, experts and advocates say.

EU toughens emissions reduction target, aiming for 55% cut instead of 40% relative to 1990

Wind turbines spin in front of the setting sun near Orono, Ont. on Saturday, March 4, 2017. The cost of renewable energy is plummeting — 90 per cent for solar power, says an Oxford University publication. That's among positive signs that the Paris agreement may finally be changing the climate on climate change, experts say. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Five years after it was passed, the Paris agreement may finally be changing the climate on climate change.

"I've always known we're not going to act as soon as we could have," said Mark Jaccard, a widely consulted energy economist at Simon Fraser University.

"I also know that when we do start to act, it'll be very fast. It'll be one of those tipping points and it could be that we're at one right now."

On Dec. 12, 2015, 196 countries met in Paris and put their signatures on a legally binding treaty to do what it took to limit global warming to below two degrees Celsius and to create carbon-neutral economies by 2050.

Progress on those promises has been spotty.

The United Nations annual emissions gap report released this week points out that greenhouse gas emissions have continued to grow and reached record levels in 2019. Even with a seven per cent decline in emissions expected this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic, atmospheric concentrations are expected to rise.

The Liberal government has committed Canada to being carbon neutral by 2050. But it has released no plan for the three to four per cent annual cuts that it would take to get there. Canada has never met any of its previous climate goals and is one of five G20 countries behind on its Paris commitments.

And yet ...

"We have a much stronger climate movement that we did," said Keith Stewart of Greenpeace. "A lot of the big forces in the world are starting to line up behind the transition."

A flare stack lights the sky from the Imperial Oil refinery in Edmonton on December 28, 2018. The Liberal government has committed Canada to being carbon neutral by 2050. But it has released no plan for the three to four per cent annual cuts that it would take to get there. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

Financial institutions, energy, vehicles transitioning

More and more financial institutions — including, just this week, the $225-billion New York state pension fund — are divesting from fossil fuels or decarbonizing. The UN says 126 countries, including China, have either adopted binding net-zero goals or are considering them.

The cost of renewable energy is plummeting — 90 per cent for solar power, says an Oxford University publication. Some countries — again, including China — are putting end dates on the sale of gas-powered vehicles.

"The effort is picking up speed," Jaccard said.

A woman walks past a Tesla car being charged in Beijing, China, Monday, Jan. 7, 2019. Some countries, including China, are putting end dates on the sale of gas-powered vehicles. (Ng Han Guan/The Associated Press)

What Canada has achieved

Without Paris, Canada wouldn't have achieved what it has, federal Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson told an online webinar Thursday.

"Canadians were really tired of inaction," he said. "The pan-Canadian framework was something that came out of the Paris agreement."

The federal Liberals have implemented a carbon tax, signed agreements to reduce methane releases, promised a clean-fuel standard to cut vehicle emissions, announced $1.5 billion in funding for electric buses and charging stations, and helped phase out coal-generated power.

"The Trudeau government is the only federal government Canada's had that is implementing the pricing and regulations that actually reduce emissions," Jaccard said.

Wilkinson promises even more.

"We know that more ambition will be required."

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Country will need to support Alta., Sask., N.L., advocate says

More is needed than just a new set of targets, Stewart said. Canadians who depend on the fossil fuel industry need help with the transition.

"There's a whole bunch of people who are going to be hurt badly if we don't do this properly," he said. "The rest of the country is going to be supporting Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland."

Jaccard said some way may be needed to prevent countries that aren't limiting emissions from having a trade advantage. Tariffs that penalize products from high-carbon jurisdictions are being discussed both at home and abroad, he said.

"How do you get any kind of collective action when there are easy rewards for cheating? You have to have penalty mechanisms."

Paris made a real difference and progress is out there, said Jaccard.

"I react strongly to people who say it's too late. The evidence doesn't support it.

"It's harder, which means we've taken longer to act on it, but I always knew we would act."

European Council President Charles Michel, center, speaks during a media conference at an EU summit in Brussels, Friday, Dec. 11, 2020. European Union leaders have reached a hard-fought deal to cut the bloc's greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55 percent by the end of the decade compared with 1990 levels. (Johanna Geron via AP)

New EU climate target

Climate action is gaining momentum not just in Canada, but around the world.

On Friday, European Union countries agreed a new climate change target for the bloc after haggling through the night in Brussels, pulling the political trigger on a policy revamp to make every sector greener.

Leaders of the 27 member states agreed to cut their net greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55 per cent from 1990 levels by 2030, substantially toughening an existing 40 per cent target.

The EU wants to reach "net zero" emissions by 2050, a deadline that scientists say the world must meet to avert the most catastrophic impacts of climate change.

With files from CBC News