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Indicators
  Sulphur Dioxides
  Nitrogen Dioxides
  Volatile Organic Compounds
  Carbon Monoxide
  Greenhouse Gas Emissions
  Water Consumption
  Municipal Sewage Treatment
  Energy Consumption
  Energy Efficiency
  Municipal Waste
  Recycling
  Hazardous Waste
  Nuclear Waste
  Ozone Depletion
  Pesticide Use
  Fertilizer Use
  Livestock
  Species at Risk
  Protected Areas
  Fisheries
  Forests
  Road Vehicles
  Distance Traveled
  Population
  Official Development Assistance
   

 

 

CLIMATE CHANGE:
Greenhouse Gas Emissions

It is widely acknowledged that emissions of greenhouse gases by human society are causing climate change on a global scale.11 Most greenhouse gas emissions are caused by the burning of fossil fuels for energy and by industrial processes such as petroleum refining and cement manufacturing. The dominant greenhouse gas is carbon dioxide.

Although the precise impacts are not known, it is expected that climate change will cause rising sea levels (threatening millions of people), changing precipitation patterns, thinning of polar ice caps, heat waves, floods, droughts, water shortages and disruptions of forests and agriculture. Northern regions are expected to be particularly hard hit. The Canadian Arctic is already experiencing warmer weather, shorter winters, melting permafrost, wildlife impacts and disruptions of traditional Inuit lifestyles.

Canada signed the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992, and pledged to stabilize greenhouse gas emissions at 1990 levels by the year 2000. In 1997, Canada signed the Kyoto Protocol, formally committing to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 6% below 1990 levels by 2010. However these international efforts to stabilize greenhouse gas emissions have failed to bear fruit, as countries have been unable to agree on means to calculate reductions. Canada, along with the United States, Australia and Japan, has been criticized for blocking these international efforts.

Canada’s OECD Ranking
Canada is a dismal 27th out of 29 OECD nations when greenhouse gas emissions are measured on a per capita basis. Canadians produce 16.84 tonnes of carbon dioxide, per person, per year, 48% above the OECD average of 11.41 tonnes and more than four times the global average.

Canada’s total carbon dioxide emissions were 515,375,000 tonnes, placing Canada 25th out of 29 OECD nations. Only the United States, Japan, Germany and the United Kingdom produce more total carbon dioxide emissions than Canada.

Trend
Canadian greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, despite a series of government initiatives that have relied largely on education and voluntary measures. Canadian greenhouse gas emissions are up by more than 13.5% since 1990, despite government commitments to stabilize emissions at 1990 levels by the year 2000.

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