Stephen Harper seemed smug about his contribution at the Commonwealth conference in Uganda around the critical issue of climateย change.
For the first time in a very long time Canada’s voice is being heard. And the consequence of our voice being heard is we’re getting the changes we want to see,โ heย said.
What he wanted, and what he got, was that the conference dissolved without a resolution that even mentioned binding carbon emissionsย targets.
According to the Canadian Press at the Kampalaย conference,
โฆ some foreign diplomats were so disgusted that they sought out Canadian journalists to tell them what their country was doing behind closedย doors.โ
One diplomat called the Harper approach โa perfect recipe for making sure nothingย happensโ.
Your tax dollars atย workโฆ
The rest of the world must be puzzled by Canadaโs complete abdication of leadership around climate change. After all, Canada led the world in the development of peacekeeping. We spearheaded an international treaty restricting the use of land mines. We hosted the historic conference in Montreal banning CFCโs that threaten the Earthโs ozone layer. Even under Brian Mulroney, Canada led the way opposing apartheid in Southย Africa.
Yet the erosion of our international reputation due to Harperโs intransigence around climate change is wellย underway.
Last weekend in Kampala, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni signaled his disgust with Harper by quoting former Liberal Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau in his closingย remarks.
Last summer at the G8 summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel stated in refreshingly frank Teutonic fashion that, โOf course we are not happy at this point that Canada has abandoned Kyoto’sย goals.โ
With the resounding defeat of Australian Prime Minister John Howard, Harper (and Canada) are even more isolated in opposing Kyoto. In fact, Howardโs replacement, Kevin Rudd stated that he will make it his first act of office to sign his nation onto the climateย accord.
That leaves Canada alone only with the Bush administration amongst developed nations in opposing the binding emissions targets laid out in theย treaty.
Harper is in fact unabashedly proud of his efforts to destroy Kyoto. In a fundraising letter to party faithful in 2002, Harper described the global climate protocol as a โessentially a socialist scheme to suck money out of wealth-producingย nations.โ
While in opposition, he routinely questioned the robust scientific consensus around climate change. (His academic training is inย economics.)
In his closing remarks in Kampala last week, Harper called Kyoto a โmistakeโ that the world must never repeat. His handiwork blocking a strong statement from the Commonwealth will gravely undermine efforts to achieve consensus at the upcoming UN climate talks next month in Bali – setting the stage for further nationalย embarrassment.
The December gathering of 190 nations under the UN banner in Indonesia will negotiate what will replace Kyoto when the protocol expires in 2012. Harper seems to be working hard to ensure that business as usual willย prevail.
The long legacy of ineffectual international response to this looming climate crisis seems destined to continue โ due largely to the efforts of Canadaโs 22nd prime minister. While this might play well with the oil lobby in Alberta, the price will be our national stature on the worldย stage.
Compare the bland obfuscation from Harper to what is being said by California Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger – a man managing an economy larger than our own who has a proven track record on reducingย emissions:
The consequences of global climate change are so pressing that it doesnโt matter who was responsible for the past; what matters is who is responsible for the future โ and that means all of us. The rich nations and the poor nations have different responsibilities. But one responsibility we all have, and that is actionโฆaction, action,ย action!โ
Action will eventually be taken on climate change. Other nations will lead if Canada does not. In the greatest threat ever facing humanity and the planet, Canada is at grave risk of being found squarely on the wrong side ofย history.
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