Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday is reportedly expected to approve a $5.5 billion expansion of the Trans Mountain tar sands pipeline, a move environmentalists warned would make an “absolute mockery” of the House of Commons’ vote to declare a climate emergency just hours earlier.
The vote Monday night made Canada the third nation to declare a national climate emergency, but critics said purely rhetorical acknowledgements of the planetary crisis are meaningless without concrete action.
“It’s great that more countries and regions are doing this,” tweeted 16-year-old Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg after the vote. “
Canada declares national #ClimateEmergency.
— Greta Thunberg (@GretaThunberg) June 18, 2019
It’s great that more countries and regions are doing this. But remember:The fossil fuels must stay in the ground. Forget “climate neutral” and clever accounting. Our emissions must start their way to zero. Now. https://t.co/NU4bQ33L6Q
Trudeau’s government purchased the Trans Mountain pipeline from Kinder Morgan for $4.5 billion last May, sparking outrage from environmental groups and indigenous tribes.
Critics warned that approval of the pipeline expansion would represent a major blow to efforts slash carbon emissions to avert disastrous warming.
As the Washington Post reported, the Trans Mountain expansion project “would nearly triple the amount of Canadian crude oil the pipeline transports each day from Edmonton, Alberta, to the port in Burnaby, B.C., to be loaded onto tankers bound for Asia and other lucrative markets.”
Cam Fenton, communications and strategy manager for 350.org Canada, tweeted that the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is “out of line with a plan to meet a 1.5°C warming limit” by the end of the century.
In a
Canadian govt today: Declare a state of #climate emergency.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) June 18, 2019
Tomorrow: Approve a massive, new #tarsands pipeline, increase fossil fuel expansion, spend billions in public $ to prop it up: https://t.co/XuqK2LN5bV
Anyone else see a disconnect here?#cdnpoli #StopTMX @JustinTrudeau pic.twitter.com/lxY5OtIya6
In a statement ahead of Trudeau’s decision, the Green Party of British Columbia said approval of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion would be “reckless.”
“As elected leaders, we must act immediately and with
THIS ARTICLE ORIGINALLY POSTED HERE.