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About Ray Nakano

Ray is a retired, third generation Japanese Canadian born and raised in Hamilton, Ontario. He resides in Toronto where he worked for the Ontario Government for 28 years. Ray was ordained by Thich Nhat Hanh in 2011 and practises in the Plum Village tradition, supporting sanghas in their mindfulness practice. Ray is very concerned about our climate crisis. He has been actively involved with the ClimateFast group (https://climatefast.ca) for the past 7 years. He works to bring awareness of our climate crisis to others and motivate them to take action. He has taken the Climate Reality leadership training with Al Gore. He has created the myclimatechange.home.blog website, for tracking climate-related news articles, reports, and organizations. He has created mobilizecanada.ca to focus on what you can do to address the climate crisis. He is always looking for opportunities to reach out to communities, politicians, and governments to communicate about our climate crisis and what we need to do. He says: “Our world is in dire straits. We have to bend the curve on our heat-trapping pollutants in the next few years if we hope to avoid the most serious impacts of human-caused global warming. Doing nothing is not an option. We must do everything we can to create a livable future for our children, our grandchildren, and all future generations.”

Canada must be smart and act now

This article was written by Bea Bruske and Chris Severson, and was published in the Toronto Star on February 5, 2024.

BAKER BEA BRUSKE IS PRESIDENT OF THE CANADIAN LABOUR CONGRESS, AND CHRIS SEVERSON-BAKER IS EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE PEMBINA INSTITUTE

We face an existential climate crisis and a critical moment for our economy.

Make no mistake, countries around the world are rapidly moving toward a low-carbon economy. No one is waiting on Canada to get our political house in order, so we can keep up. If we miss the boat today, the opportunity to create good, family supporting jobs in a low-carbon economy will sail right past us. What Canada does now will determine the kinds of jobs our workers will have and the kinds of communities we will build in the future.

This is why the labour movement, businesses and climate groups have been working closely with governments on a sustainable jobs plan to build a future that works. The road map for this work is contained in the Sustainable Jobs Act, C-50, tabled in the House of Commons last June.

The stakes are very high. Overall global investments in the energy transition soared to $1.8 trillion in 2023, a 17 per cent jump from the year before according to a recent BloombergNEF report.

New sustainable industries are moving forward at warp speed. Canada reached five per cent of total new car registrations being zeroemissions vehicle (ZEV) in the first quarter of 2022. By the third quarter of 2023, that had more than doubled to over 12 per cent.

When the adoption of a new technology reaches a tipping point, it can quickly become mainstream. Microwaves took decades to get to that point, then in the 1980s suddenly almost every household had one.

Today, Canadians are buying electric cars and investments are flowing into this burgeoning industry. But like with so many sectors, there is stiff competition for these dollars. The American’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) means our closest neighbour now has aggressive subsidies and tax credits, many paired with job standards. Canada needs to be smart and strategic to compete for investments, and to ensure those investments create and protect the good jobs that support communities across Canada.

This is where the Sustainable Jobs Act comes in. It brings stakeholders around a single table, in a new Sustainable Jobs Partnership Council to build the plans that can give Canada a competitive advantage unlocking these new opportunities.

By bringing workers, businesses, Indigenous Peoples, and environmental groups together with governments behind co-ordinated action, we’ll show the world that Canada is ready.

Passing the Sustainable Jobs Act and getting the new Sustainable Jobs Partnership Council working will deliver the message, loud and clear: Canada is a great place to invest, with workers who are second to none and ready to get the job done.

Since it was tabled, unions and environmental groups have worked with the government and opposition parties to strengthen the bill. Now we must pass it as soon as possible, so we can get started building an economy where sustainable industries are employing workers in good, sustainable jobs in every province and every region of the country. The kinds of good union jobs that power flourishing, livable communities.

We are ready to start building this better future, but we need the government to act with urgency, push past those trying to obstruct good jobs for Canadians and get the Sustainable Jobs Act passed as soon as possible.

If we don’t get this bill passed soon, we could delay climate action and fail to unlock these opportunities, sacrificing thousands and thousands of good future jobs and billions in future investment. Our workers, communities, and planet cannot afford to let this opportunity slip through our fingers.

With the World Stumbling Past 1.5 Degrees of Warming, Scientists Warn Climate Shocks Could Trigger Unrest and Authoritarian Backlash

Most of the public seems unaware that global temperatures will soon push past the target to which the U.N. hoped to limit warming, but researchers see social and psychological crises brewing.

This article was written by Bob Berwyn and was published in Inside Climate News on January 28, 2024.

‘Axe the tax’ movement places unfair burden on our children

This opinion was written by Paul Kershaw, policy professor at UBC and founder of Generation Squeeze, Canada’s leading voice for generational fairness. You can follow Gen Squeeze on X, Facebook, Instagram, and subscribe to Paul’s Hard Truths podcast. It was published in the Globe & Mail on February 3, 2024.

If you make a mess, you should help clean it up. That’s a responsibility my mom taught me. As the House of Commons returned to session, Pierre Poilievre, the Conservative Leader, betrayed this family value by courting voters with his promise to eliminate responsibility to pay for our pollution.

Whether to pay for pollution isn’t about consumer preferences. It’s a duty we owe to our kids. We need our politicians to recognize as much if they are to identify real solutions to the affordability crisis, and to reduce risks from extreme weather.

A new Abacus poll signals Mr. Poilievre has convinced many Canadians that the price on pollution is a primary source of financial pain. Alas, research from the University of Calgary shows he is pulling the wool over our eyes.

Professors Trevor Tombe and Jennifer Winter calculated the direct and indirect costs of the carbon tax to examine the entire financial impact of the tax relative to its absence. They use data from British Columbia, where the carbon price is the same as that levied by the federal plan. They found that carbon pricing adds 0.5 per cent to the cost of food and beverages; 0.29 per cent to rent; 0.2 per cent for clothing and footwear; and less than 0.13 per cent for insurance and financial services.

This means that for every dollar we spend on our major expenditures, the price on pollution adds less than a penny. The professors conclude: “Knowing that much of the present affordability crisis is due to factors other than emissions pricing, the elimination of the carbon tax is unlikely to solve the problem … [P]olicy makers will need to consider alternative solutions.”

Elsewhere, I’ve discussed how better child care, parental leave, housing, retirement and health policy offer such solutions. There are also savings to be gained from increased energy efficiency. The axe-the-tax campaign distracts attention from these options, which can deliver more relief to many wallets.

Worse still, the campaign distracts attention from why we pay for our pollution in the first place.

We pay for pollution because we love our kids and grandchildren. Their health, safety, air, food and drinking water are put in jeopardy when we pollute too much. Pollution accelerates the loss of clean lakes, healthy forests, snow-capped mountains, great plains, and the awe-inspiring wildlife with which we share our lands and oceans when we hike, boat, hunt and fish.

Beyond status, consumption and convenience, we are all driven by deeply ingrained desires to be part of something larger so that we preserve what we hold sacred for our descendants.

By punting the costs of pollution to our kids, Mr. Poilievre proposes to deal with pollution problems later. But later is now too late. Later is an abuse of the authority we wield over our kids and future generations. Since they legally can’t vote, they are trusting us to do more, not less, to fight climate change. This means urgently reducing our smog, litter and trash, and paying for messes made by our pollution – past and present.

The hard truth is that we should be expanding pollution pricing, not cutting it, because greenhouse gasses aren’t the only source of pollution. Plastics and other toxins pollute our oceans. There are pollutants from mining and fracking; industrial waste; single-use garbage, and more.

Industries with big profits and carbon footprints should pay their fair share so that the rest of us don’t feel like chumps when paying the consumer carbon price. So, it’s good news the federal government is making important, albeit imperfect, progress on this front, including its new regulatory framework to limit pollution by the oil and gas sector.

But at bottom, let’s remember we pay for our pollution to be good parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles. That’s why we’re building a Good Ancestors movement at the Generation Squeeze website.

Our plan is to remind Canadians that pollution pricing helps us fulfill responsibilities to our kids by loyally stewarding sacred resources that are essential to our health.

If enough of us share this reminder, we predict more Canadians will open their hearts and minds to evidence that there are better ways to reduce affordability pressures than axing the carbon tax.

Because nobody wants to feel forced to choose between the financial security of their families right now versus leaving a healthy and safe legacy for their kids, grandkids, and generations to come.

People want both. All political parties should deliver both, if we want Canada to work for all generations.

Teach your children well, or else

Democracy by Margaret Atwood | Democracy 2024

This editorial was written and published by the Globe & Mail on January 27, 2024.

The novelist Margaret Atwood wrote and narrated a short animated video this week on the ways that countries can devolve into totalitarian nightmares. Released by The Financial Times, the video was a concise recap of how, in the 20th century, moments of chaos combined with the weakening of traditional institutions led to horrific dictatorships on the left (the Soviet Union under Stalin) and the right (Nazi Germany under Hitler).

In a bit of cosmic alignment, also released last week was an Abacus poll that found that one-third of adult Canadians cannot recall taking any courses in civics in elementary and secondary school.

Abacus found that those who couldn’t recall learning about how democratic institutions and government work were 10 percentage points less likely to say they voted in the last federal election, while those who couldn’t recall learning about current events were nine points less likely to say they voted in that election.

The survey also found that only one in 10 people said they were taught how to discuss controversial social and political issues in school. (The survey was conducted with 1,919 Canadian adults from Dec. 7-12, 2023. The margin of error is plus or minus 2.24 per cent, 19 times out of 20.)

That survey was tied to another recent survey of Canadian teachers that found that more than 50 per cent of them say they lack adequate training in civic education, and that in many provinces such courses are more of an afterthought than a centre piece of children’s educations.

The report by the non-profit group CIVIX Canada notes that “calls for civic-education reform emerge almost like clockwork alongside social crises.” But – and here is where Ms. Atwood’s video comes in – we are in a period of history where crises of all kinds are its defining feature.

The COVID-19 pandemic and the trucker protests tore at Canada’s social fabric. Inflation and surging housing costs have left people struggling to pay their bills. Climate change is making them anxious about the future. The use of misinformation and personal attacks on social media is devaluing the common currency of exchange. A growing distrust of democratic institutions such as the media and Parliament (some of it self-inflicted) and of elections (due to foreign interference) risks pulling people further apart.

Add to this Donald Trump’s attacks on the United States’ democratic institutions and conventions, plus the aggressions of strongmen like Vladimir Putin in Russia and Xi Jinping in China, and we are at a point where democracy can’t go a day without being introduced to a new threat.

The upshot in Canada is that people seem in these hard times to have lost sight of how lucky they are to live in this safe and democratic country. At the fringes, there are even those who compare Canada to the Soviet Union or Nazi Germany, a ludicrous opinion fuelled by either malice, political opportunism or an ignorance of history based on a lack of personal experience for which the holder ought to be eternally grateful.

Ms. Atwood accurately points out in her video that democracy requires a public that has an understanding of how the system works – its flaws included, we might add – in order to withstand the slings and arrows of populism, and to survive difficult moments.

In Canada, that needs to start in school. Teachers need to be properly trained, and provided with adequate time, to instruct their students on how our democratic institutions operate, why it is important to vote, how to get involved in community and how to discuss and debate controversial issues in a civil manner.

The latter is critical to democracy. Teenagers must learn how to express their opinions respectfully, and to respect the opinions of others. (A lot of adults need to learn that, too.)

Education is a provincial jurisdiction, of course. But there is a national interest in strengthening our democracy from the bottom up. Last week, the Trudeau government announced it would hold a national summit on car theft. Nice idea but, as serious as that issue might be, it can’t match the urgency of armouring Canada’s future voters against the erosions of the 21st century.

If anything needs a shared national effort to solve, it’s the state of civic education in Canada. Failing to provide children with an appreciation for democracy is a mistake at the best of times. Doing so today seems self-destructive.

Good climate news — for once

It’s easy to miss momentum that arrives in small steps rather than huge leaps

This article was written by Theresa Beer and was published in the Toronto Star on January 27, 2024.

THERESA BEER IS A COMMUNICATIONS AND POLICY SPECIALIST AT THE DAVID SUZUKI FOUNDATION.

“Progress, but not fast enough.” It’s a common headline these days when it comes to climate action — not fast enough for a climate-safe future in which the 1.5 C goal set by the Paris Agreement to prevent global temperatures from rising to catastrophic levels is kept alive.

It’s easy to miss momentum that arrives in small steps rather than huge leaps. But climate policies and regulations are working to bring down emissions, with big gains expected once they kick into higher gear and loopholes that favour oil and gas use are closed.

An independent assessment for the Canadian Climate Institute models existing climate policy against a no-climate-policy scenario and finds that emissions today would be seven per cent higher, and 41 per cent higher in 2030, without legislated, developing and announced policies.

Last year, Canada moved ahead with plans to clean up the electricity grid, cap harmful emissions from fossil fuels and make electric vehicles more available and affordable. Not only do these regulatory and policy advances tackle emissions, but they also come with jobs and health benefits. The rapid pace of announcements for investments in electric vehicle and battery manufacturing points to the economic writing on the wall. The policies are big cost-savers compared to not acting on the worsening climate crisis.

And after decades of silence, the world’s spotlight at the COP28 climate summit turned to transitioning off oil, gas and coal. While gaping loopholes remain that risk expanding gas production and rely on unproven technology like carbon capture and storage, the main culprit behind the climate crisis — the fossil fuel industry — was identified.

Fossil fuel greenwashing is being called out and accountability demanded. Ideas from health-care professionals, such as banning advertising for fossil fuels, are gaining traction. Some are calling for a windfall tax on fossil fuel profits as people struggle to pay for rent and food while oil and gas companies rake in record profits.

Then there’s the rise of renewables. The International Energy Agency assesses clean energy growth as “unstoppable.” The agency projects that nearly half the world’s electricity supply will come from renewable energy by 2030. Renewable energy has become the lowest-priced energy in history. Heat pumps and energy efficiency have hit the mainstream.

Indigenous communities demonstrated what leading a transition to a clean energy economy with equitable solutions looks like. Many are gaining energy sovereignty through renewable energy. Outside of utilities, Indigenous nations are the largest renewable energy asset owners in Canada.

Despite these benefits, some provinces, politicians and industries want to put the brakes on climate action, under the dubious pretence of addressing affordability. Alberta and Saskatchewan, in particular, are rejecting climate progress on multiple fronts. Canada’s fossil fuel industry is risking creating stranded assets as it seeks to increase production of products like liquefied “natural” gas, especially in B.C.

Some are calling for effective policies, such as carbon pricing, to be dropped. But climate action based on politics rather than evidence won’t get us where need to go. The carbon levy adds a small amount to inflationary woes compared to the volatile fossil fuel industry, and most people in Canada receive rebates to help with affordability — the most recent in January this year.

We can’t afford more delays to climate action. We can’t afford to reverse course or stall if we want to avoid worsening impacts from extreme weather-related events, such as wildfires, floods and droughts. The momentum for a clean transition must increase as we move away from oil, gas and coal.

That’s how Canada can finally meet climate targets and build more livable communities in the process. The good news is that people in Canada want climate action. It’s time for a “whole society” approach with all levels of government, industry, communities and people doing their part. That’s how to change the headline to “Canada’s action on climate on track to make a big difference.”

An independent assessment for the Canadian Climate Institute found that emissions today would be seven per cent higher, and 41 per cent higher in 2030, without legislated, developing and announced policies

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