Harper going to Copenhagen despite himself
It wasn’t in his plans.
The last thing Prime Minister Stephen Harper wanted to do was to attend the big United Nations summit on climate change.
That means trying to figure out how to cut greenhouse gas emissions from Harper’s beloved Alberta oil sands and having to explain it to those big multinational oil companies. Not his idea of a good time.
But with 65 % of the world’s leaders in attendance and U.S. President Barak Obama announcing this week that he’s going and so is Chinese prime minister Wen Jiabao, Harper did not have much choice if he wants to be respected by the big boys.
Policitians from the entire worold will be trying to draft a new climate-change agreement to replace the Kyoto Accord which expires in 2012.
But don’t expect Harper to do very much at the summit, certainly not lead the way as Canada used to do at environmental conferences.
Harper has been going around saying it is unlikely that there will be an agreement. That’s even before the talks begin. Great positive attitude!
He won’t say what Canada’s position will be, but he promises he’ll be doing whatever the Americans say, because he believes it makes sense to have a lock-step environmental policy with the United States, since that’s who buys Canada’s oil and gas exports.
Most of the Canadian oil companies are American-owned anyhow, and for them it’s easier to follow U.S. energy policies. Some even run their Canadian oil operations out of New York and Texas.
Harper has steadfastly refused to sign any climate-change agreement limiting greenhouse gases unless poorer nations make the same kind of commitment as Canada is being asked. That would drive them into the poorhouse, they say, so they haven’t signed, and since they haven’t, Harper also refuses to sign. Convenient stalemate for all concerned.
Meanwhile the planet continues to heat up, the ice cap is melting, the Canadian Arctic will soon be international waters and some Pacific nations will sink below the waves just about the time we reach Harper’s target date of 2050. So get yourself water wings.
Any climate change agreement would deal Harper’s beloved Alberta tar sands a hard blow by forcing them to eliminate tonnes of carbon they’ve been pumping out into the atmosphere. Not a prospect they relish.
The announcement of Harper’s change of mind about attending Copenhagen came at the exact same moment that Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff was announcing his own climate-change policy in Quebec City.
Coincidence?” I think not. The Harper “spin doctors” are masters at stealing Ignatieff’s thunder every time he has a major announcement. He still hasn’t figured it out.
In his usual put-you-to-sleep monotone Ignatieff promised that a Liberal government would hold the global warming increase to no more than two degrees Celsius until the year 2020.
Secondly he would institute a cap-and-trade system, basically the same kind of policy as Harper and the New Democrats talk about., except that Harper is talking about making it voluntary for oil companies and is aiming at the year 2050.
Not a blessed word about the “carbon tax” of his predecessor, Stéphane Dion, That died last January and Ignatieff is not about to bring it back.
Ignatieff was asked what he thought of Harper going to Copenhagen.
“He’s being dragged there by the U.S. president,” replied Ignatieff.
Bloc Quebecois leader Gilles Duceppe was less kind.
“Both of them (Harper and Ignatieff) have said they won’t touch the tar sands.” For Duceppe, that says it all.
As for Harper at the summit, Duceppe replied: “He’s not going as prime minister; he’s going as the business agent for the oil companies.”
Ouch!
PatriciaAnne Hennessey
Comment online since December 6th 2009Dear Richard: Perhaps you've heard of Climategate? Stephen Harper should spend as little time in Copenhgen as possible, promise nothing and sign nothing. Water wings forsooth! That doesn't even bear discussion. Please educate yourself and write what is really going on.