ES101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Mike Harcourt, Bakken Pipeline, Brian Mulroney

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13 Jun 2018
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Week 11, Lecture 2: Environment and Politics
Final on content from midterm on
Summing up the links between economy and the environment
The relationship between economic and environmental outcomes is complicated
Environmental outcomes often cannot be accurately valued in $, yet our economic
decisions are based on $ valuations
Economic theory assumes that never-ending growth is both possible and desirable, even
though it is wrong on both counts
Some additional thoughts
Sustainable development is important
But in many parts of the work eg countries in bottom of HDI any development would be
welcome, sustainable or otherwise
The gap between have and have not countries is growing
The gap within countries between haves and have nots is growing
It is very difficult to achieve sustainability in the face of gross inequity
Environment, politics - ch 27
Dakota pipeline protests
Indigenous people are leading a blockade of a pipeline being constructed to transport oil
to Chicago
When do protests become necessary?
Typically, when the political system fails to provide just, equitable outcomes to
contentious problems
Does Canada need a Green Party?
Aren’t the other parties “green”?
What explains growth in popularity of the federal Green Party?
Why is Green Party support not so strong at the provincial level?
Where is Green Party support strongest? (pockets of support, Guelph)
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Textbook suggests democracies are not well suited for good environmental governance
because:
Elections are held every few years
Politicians therefore only focus on short-term issues
Politicians like simple solutions, but these often don’t exist when it comes to
environment
Most politicians aren’t knowledgeable about the environment in any event
Blue-green
Brian Mulroney, conservative party leader
Prime minister 1984-93
Signed acid rain agreement with US, negotiated montreal protocol on CFCs; signed UN
climate change convention, created 8 national parks
Red-green
Federal environment minister 2004-2006, leader of liberal party 2006-2008, now global
affairs minister
Organized montreal summit on climate change
As party leader, proposed Canada adopt the green shift, a policy where personal and
corporate income taxes would be cut and replaced with a carbon tax
Orange-green
Mike Harcourt, mayor of vancouver, 1980-86
NDP premier of BC, 1991,96
Long time crusader for urban sustainability
Today chairs UBCs regional sustainability council
Green-green
Gord Miller, environmental commissioner for ontario from 2000-2015
Issued regular reports on ontario govts environmental performance, often highly critical
Unsuccessfully ran as green party candidate in guelph in last election (got 11% of vote)
Read about him in text
The point?
All parties have the capacity to conceive and implement sound environmental policies
They simply need to be told by voters that this is what is expected from them
An important current political issue in Canada
How to reduce canadian greenhouse gas emissions?
Federal government has proposed a national carbon tax of $50/t by 2022, but would
allow provinces to do their own tax or cap-and-trade if it achieves emissions reductions
Also wants to phase out all coal-fired electricity plants in canada by 2030
Who supports a national carbon tax?
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Federal government
All provincial governments except saskatchewan
Most major oil and resource development companies
Who opposes?
Official opposition
Saskatchewan
Some people argue that if Donald Trump scraps US action on climate change,
we should too
How do canadians feel about a carbon tax?
October 2016 ipsos poll found that majority (58%) of canadians believe carbon pricing
will eb effective in lowering canada’s greenhouse gas emissions and changing
canadians behaviour
The greatest concern = it might be another tax grab that does not lead to results
Shifts in people’s environmental concerns over recent decades (text)
People are more aware that human activities can harm the environment
People are not just worried about local effects of pollution, but global effects as well
General belief that climate change is the most pressing threat
Awareness that developing countries have big pollution problems
Poverty leads to harmful outcomes for the environment
We worry about effects of chemicals, pollutants on our health
We look to international organizations for action on the environment
How accurate are these assertions?
Is the environment important to canadians?
A 2012 environment canada survey found canadians ranked their top three priorities as:
Economy 17%
Healthcare 12.5%
Environment 9%
Is the government doing a good job protecting the environment?
A december 2012 poll of canadians got these responses
Yes 39%
No 61%
Are canadians doing their best to help the environment?
A 2013 poll found:
24% think they are helping as best they can
74% admit they could do more
2% don’t care
Basic principles that should guide environmental policy
Humility: accept that we don’t know as much about the environment as we could
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Document Summary

Summing up the links between economy and the environment. The relationship between economic and environmental outcomes is complicated. Environmental outcomes often cannot be accurately valued in $, yet our economic decisions are based on $ valuations. Economic theory assumes that never-ending growth is both possible and desirable, even though it is wrong on both counts. But in many parts of the work eg countries in bottom of hdi any development would be welcome, sustainable or otherwise. The gap between have and have not countries is growing. The gap within countries between haves and have nots is growing. It is very difficult to achieve sustainability in the face of gross inequity. Indigenous people are leading a blockade of a pipeline being constructed to transport oil to chicago. Typically, when the political system fails to provide just, equitable outcomes to contentious problems. Where is green party support strongest? (pockets of support, guelph)

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