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The world’s nations are racing to rein in the climate crisis while maintaining strong economies. Troublingly, Canada is far behind in this time-critical race to build a low-carbon economy. Our decades of foot-dragging have put both our future prosperity and our climate at risk.
To illustrate Canada’s precarious position, I’ve turned to two reports comparing how dependent many of the world’s major economies are on climate pollution. These reports measure “carbon intensity,” which is the ratio of wealth created (GDP) per tonne of climate pollution emitted (tCO2). You can think of it as a measure of how prepared we are to prosper in a low-carbon future.
How Canada stacks up
For the last decade, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) has been tracking this critical economic metric with its Low Carbon Economy Index reports. I’ve used the data in its most recent report to create a series of charts showing how Canada stacks up against our global peers.
The first of my charts compares the world’s top 10 economies. The coin stacks indicate how much GDP each economy produces per tonne of CO2. These 10 economies produce 70 per cent of the world’s GDP.
As you can see, Canada is second to last, and well below the global average. Our economy creates only $3,000 per tCO2 emitted. (Note: all monetary values are in U.S. dollars to allow comparison between countries.)
Only the coal-choked Chinese economy creates less GDP per tonne of climate pollution, at $2,600.
Our next closest competitor in the low-carbon economic race is our largest trading partner, the United States, which is running $1,000 ahead of us.
And take a look at the Europeans. The overall European Union economy is $3,400 ahead of us. They’ve essentially lapped us in this race, generating twice as much wealth as we are able to from each tonne of climate pollution. France is even further ahead, producing three times more GDP per tCO2 than us.
It gets worse. While being mired in second-to-last place in the low-carbon transition race is a decidedly risky position, the data shows our position is even more precarious than that.
Falling ever further behind
According to the PwC report, Canada's economy has also been one of the slowest at cleaning up over the last couple decades. We’ve been losing ground to all three of the world’s super-economies: the U.S., the EU and China.
My next chart tells that troubling tale.
I've added green to the coin stacks to show the changes since 2000.
For example, the green part of Canada’s stack shows we’re up 35 per cent since 2000. That increased our GDP per tCO2 by $800.
But China was cleaning up twice as fast. They increased their GDP per tCO2 by 67 per cent. They've nearly caught up to us. In fact, if these rates continue, China will pass us in the next decade — leaving Canada dead last.
What do you think? Are you ready to face the metastasizing climate crisis with an economy even more climate-polluting than China’s?
And China isn’t the only major economy that has been cleaning up much faster than we have. Back in 2000, we were neck and neck with the Americans. Since then, the U.S. economy has sprinted far ahead of us. They’ve improved their carbon intensity by 56 per cent, caught up to the world average and are on pace to pass both India and Japan in the coming decade. See ya later, Canada.
And the Europeans have likewise been racing ever further ahead of us.
The U.K. has been leading the way over there. It nearly doubled the amount of GDP it produces from each tonne of climate pollution. In fact, its increase of $3,700 is more per tonne than our economy can produce in total. How did our Commonwealth peer manage to sprint so far ahead of us? The short answer is that they reduced their climate pollution by 100 times more than we did (-250 MtCO2 versus -2 MtCO2). And they did that because they passed laws requiring it more than a decade ago.
The great Canadian divide
To try to gain more insight into why our Canadian economy lags so far behind our economic peers in this race, I decided to dig down one more level to see what our provincial economies have been doing.
Using data from Canada's National Inventory Report (NIR) and Statistics Canada, I calculated the carbon intensity for our six biggest provincial economies, which produce 95 per cent of Canada’s GDP and climate pollution.
My next chart shows the results.
The first thing that jumps out is a huge divide in carbon intensities.
On one side are the Alberta and Saskatchewan economies that produce less than half the Canadian average. And they’ve been cleaning up much slower, as well. That has left them increasingly further behind.
On the other side of the divide are the other four major provincial economies — Manitoba, B.C., Ontario and Quebec. Each of these produces more GDP per tCO2 than the Canadian average. And they have all been cleaning up faster than the other side, widening the divide.
To see how this provincial divide measures up on the world stage, I’ve added each side to my original chart.
On the far left is a new red bar showing the combined economies of Alberta and Saskatchewan. They only manage to create around $1,400 in GDP per tCO2. That’s half of what the Chinese economy can produce per tonne of climate pollution. And these two provinces have been dragging their feet cleaning up, while China has been sprinting ever further ahead.
It's hard for me to imagine a riskier climate strategy than being twice as dirty as China’s economy and choosing to fall ever further behind.
Canada’s other four major provincial economies are combined in the new red bar between Japan and Germany. They’re in the middle of the pack and cleaning up at roughly the same pace as the U.S. and the EU.
But there’s reason to worry here, too. That’s because most of these gains since 2000 have come from a single policy in a single province: the coal phaseout in Ontario. And that’s now over.
So, Canada will need to find significant new emissions cuts elsewhere, and soon.
Unfortunately for our hopes of building low-carbon prosperity, we are still mired in denial, inaction and greenwash in Canada. For example, the province that had been leading the way, Ontario, recently abandoned many of its climate policies. Our federal government in Ottawa refuses to produce even a plan that, if ever implemented, would get us anywhere close to our Paris Agreement climate target for 2030. On the West Coast, B.C. is busy backsliding by expanding one of the most carbon-intensive sectors in its economy — fracked fossil gas. And its neighbours in Alberta and Saskatchewan are fighting in court to block even the few far-too-weak-to-meet-our-climate-targets policies that Canada does have.
The larger race
So far we’ve looked at Canada’s carbon intensity compared to the world’s other top 10 economies. I’ll wrap with a look at how we stack up against a much larger set of countries.
This next chart is from the Green Growth Indicators 2017 report by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). It shows the carbon intensity for 46 nations, covering the years 1995 to 2014.
I’ve highlighted the names of the global top 10 economies covered in the previous charts. And I’ve listed the improvement percentage for each over these years.
Where’s Canada?
Sadly, we are nearly in last place in this much larger group, too. And again, as this study highlights, we’ve been cleaning up far slower than most.
We’ve wasted two precious decades and are now even further behind.
One last sobering observation here is that the economies of Alberta and Saskatchewan would show up dead last on this chart — at around $1.2 per KgCO2 (a.k.a.: $1,200 per tCO2).
If you think that’s the inevitable result of being a northern oil-producing region, take a look at where Norway is. They are way up above France on the chart — producing $8,700 in GDP per tCO2. That is seven times more than Alberta or Saskatchewan. Climate failure is a choice.
Which of those economies would you rather have going forward into the teeth of the climate crisis?
The threat facing Canada is that time is running out. The accelerating climate crisis is rapidly shortening the time remaining to transition to low-carbon prosperity. Gone are the years when climate damage was a future threat.
Ready or not, we are all entering the age of climate consequences.
EXTENDED ENDNOTES
For those wanting a bit more detail on this critical metric, I’ve included some additional notes here.
1) Topsy turvy
In principle, carbon intensity is simple. It’s just the ratio of GDP to emissions.
In practice, however, it can get confusing because some sources report this ratio with GDP on top (GDP/CO2), while others report the inverse (CO2/GDP).
For example, the OECD report and my article use the first method. Carbon intensity is listed as dollars of GDP per unit of emissions. Canada’s carbon intensity is listed as US$3,000 per tCO2. In this version, larger numbers mean cleaner. Cleaner economies produce larger amounts of GDP per tonne of climate pollution.
In contrast, other sources like the PwC report and Canada's National Inventory Report (NIR) use the inverse ratio. They list carbon intensity as the amount of emissions per dollar of GDP. So, the same level of carbon intensity for Canada gets listed as 333 grams CO2 per dollar of GDP instead. In this version, smaller numbers mean cleaner. Cleaner economies emit smaller amounts of climate pollution per dollar of GDP.
And sometimes you may need to convert between the two versions to compare them. That’s what I needed to do with the PwC and OECD reports for this article. Fortunately, this is easy to do with a spreadsheet. Just invert either version to get the other. In math formula terms: versionA = 1 / versionB. For example, you can convert Canada’s $3,000/tCO2 by inverting it like this: 1 / $3,000/tCO2 == tCO2/$3,000 == 0.000333 tCO2/$1 (333 gCO2/$1).
2) Where Canada reports carbon intensity … and what is missing.
Canada spotlights the importance of carbon intensity in its official NIR. It is one of the four “key points” on page one of the executive summary. And it is featured in the report’s very first chart. Here it is:
While this highlights the importance of improving carbon intensity in Canada, it leaves out the critical information required to evaluate how well we are doing compared to what is needed. Missing are:
- Comparison with other nations — Are we keeping up, or falling behind, in the global low-carbon prosperity race? You can't tell from reading Canada's official NIR. That's why outside reports like those from PwC and OECD are critically important for Canadians to pay attention to. Without a sense of how we are doing relative to the world's biggest economies and our main trading partners, we are flying blind into a gathering economic climate storm.
- Comparison to our climate targets — Are we on track to building a future-proof economy that can still thrive if we choose (or are pressured) to cut emissions in line with our promises? If not, how much faster do we need to clean up? The NIR doesn't discuss what carbon intensity we need to hit our targets.
- Insight into provincial and sector trends — Which parts of our economy are cleaning up fast enough and which aren't? Are we putting our limited government funds and resources into areas that are delivering high GDP per tonne? Or are we subsidizing and expanding the lowest return and the slowest to clean up options? We can't get to low-carbon prosperity if we don't even have the basic data that shows the carbon intensity of the major parts of our economy, and what the trends are.
3) Carbon intensity for all provinces and territories … and the oil and gas sector
In the main article, I presented carbon-intensity data for our six main provincial economies. For those interested in the rest of Canada, here is an expanded chart that shows all provinces and territories.
Among the smaller provinces, New Brunswick (+79 per cent), P.E.I. (+67 per cent) and Nova Scotia (+52 per cent) all cleaned up faster than the Canadian average (+35 per cent).
Newfoundland and Labrador (+9 per cent) cleaned up slower.
And while all three northern territories are shown as getting dirtier over these years, it's not clear that has really happened. Their emissions are so small compared to the NIR data rounding in their tables that it is hard to say for sure what happened with these three.
Finally, I've included one sector example on this chart to highlight how measuring and tracking carbon intensity is so critical in the low-carbon economic race. See the smallest stack of all at the far right? That's Canada's most climate polluting sector — oil and gas extraction.
The data shows that the oil and gas sector emits 26 per cent of Canada's emissions to produce roughly six per cent of our GDP. That means it creates only a quarter as much GDP from each tonne of climate pollution as the Canadian average. (Here's the simple math: six per cent GDP/ 26 per cent GHG = 23 per cent of Canada's average GDP per tCO2.)
To make matters worse, the same data shows that the oil and gas sector has been cleaning up only half as fast as rest of our economy at just 15 per cent since 2000. That foot-dragging has left this industry ever further behind.
And yet, despite this industry making so little GDP from its emissions, and despite it cleaning up so slowly, Ottawa has still allowed — and even heavily subsidized — the oil and gas sector to grab ever larger shares of Canada emissions budget. In 2000, the oil and gas sector emitted 22 per cent of Canadians climate pollution. By 2018, it had pushed that up to 26 per cent.
With a low-carbon race strategy like this, it's no wonder Canada keeps falling further behind.
Carbon intensity is an invaluable economic metric we can use to navigate the required low-carbon transition. But only if we pay attention to it, and act on it in time.
Comments
This isn't the first time Barry has done a whole lot of work to prove a point that utterly baffles me, seems not to be a "point" at all.
This isn't a "race". The problem is global. If the problem were, say, civic, if we were trying to reduce industrial pollution in Vancouver, then I suppose you could arbitrarily cut Vancouver up into "pollution zones" and declare them to be in a "race" to de-pollute their zone. The industrial areas would fare very badly in the "race", whereas places with no industry would immediately look good!
But the overall problem would not be solved until it was solved in all Vancouver. Chopping up the planet into "nations" was done arbitrarily, by politics and war. Some nations inherently have heavy industries, like Canada, which extracts resources for a living: if there had been no resources here, it would still be hunting/gathering and be the cleanest of nations, like Lapland or the Seychelles.
I just don't even know what "losing the race" even means. Is there going to be a prize we'll miss out on? Some nice gold cup? The race will only be won by the whole globe.
And then there's the measure. "GDP per tonne of CO2" is basically a measure of how much of your GDP does not come from heavy industry. But the WORLD still needs heavy industry! It does not make the world any "cleaner" if China produces a bunch of MONEY by financial services or software. It just dilutes the amount of dirt they're producing by a larger sum of money in the denominator. The dirt remains. How much dirt?
Barry does mention the "coal-choked" Chinese economy but fails to mention how much coal. Click here for how much coal:
http://www.behindenergy.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Global-coal-cons…
...then tell me that they're better than us because they've added a bunch of money production not related to heavy industry, while continuing to consume coal like that.
Barry has selected a metric to make us look bad. That's not intellectually honest journalism.
Germany has way more heavy industry than we do, and they're doing fine. Norway has proportionally more oil than we do, and are just as far north and have just as sparse a population, and they're doing fine too. If your function-is-destiny excuse was real, Norway would be like Alberta and Germany would be significantly worse than Ontario. Clearly it's less what you do than how you do it.
The only relevant metric is whether Germany produces a tonne of steel with more or less carbon than we do. It's not about the carbon per person or the carbon per dollar, but the carbon per tonne of manufactured goods. Germany consumes less carbon by outsourcing it's electrical production to nuclear-powered France, for starters, and of course their whole carbon CONSUMPTION is far lower because they have dense cities, cycling, and trains. But what does their heavy industry (yes, twice the size of Canada's, that is, the same size per person since they have twice the population) consume per tonne of product?
The number of tonnes of steel (or carbon) you produce per dollar of GDP is not a relevant metric. Only your carbon efficiency at producing products like steel, clothing, houses and schools.
A truly wonderful place on Barry's metric would be the New York financial district: they produce hundreds of billions of dollars of "Money" with almost no carbon output, because they only have to push electrons around in computer to make "money". Of course, the money may be made by investing in Chinese coal generation, and German diesel train engines: but both of those are the other nation's problem; New York's hands are clean.
Those are all good points, Roy. In my view the metric that matters most for Canadians is whatever rules global capital imposes on industries and governments in exchange for investing. If global capital decides to care about consumption intensity instead of production intensity then Canada and its exposed industries will want to be winning the race to have low-carbon consumption intensity. Canada doesn't get to decide the global economic rules. Notice how Canada is increasingly having to put public dollars into the oilsands, for example, to make up for the pull back by global capital because the carbon-intensity is too high in that sector? That's the risk of ignoring the carbon trends in global capital. The same risk is there for the global trade rules imposed by the super-economies. The farther ahead they get on carbon-intensity, the more willing they will be to impose carbon-policies that are painful to those of us farther behind. We can certainly keep ignoring the rapidly shifting carbon-intensity trends (in both global capital and in what super-economies are doing) like we have been doing. Just seems crazy risky for Canadians, in my view.
Admittedly, the race metaphor is not totally apt. It's more a team sport, with team countries-of-the-world vs. team climate change. And Canada's letting the side down. Doesn't seem to matter how you measure, we're a floater--terrible plus/minus, no goals, no assists, don't block shots, don't get in the corners or throw checks. Bottom line, we'd be doing better in this series if Canada wasn't on the team. And apparently when someone points any of this out, we whine.
I agree with you, Rufus, that Canada is doing less that most nations in cutting our emissions and so we've not been pulling our weight. And I also think there is a more self-interested concern for Canadians on this. The main point of my article isn't that we are being poor team players...it is that Canadians are putting our economic future at risk. We are not preparing our economy fast enough to thrive and compete in a low-carbon future. As global capital and global super-economies push for lower carbon, we will be disadvantaged economically. They aren't looking to be nice and award participation ribbons. They are going to do what is economically best for them. Increasingly that means having low-carbon, high-return things to invest in and trade with. The farther behind we fall on our carbon-intensity more exposed we become to the changes and the bigger the risk we take on.
Thanks for your comment, Roy. Whether it is a "race" or not depends on whether you think Canada has enough economic clout to keep doing whatever we want with our climate pollution. If Canada never faces significant pressure to cut emissions faster than we want, then it isn't a global race because we can keep climate polluting as much as we want. Having a much dirtier economy (GDP/tCO2) won't hurt our GDP if we can super-emit per dollar created. On the other hand, if Canada ever faces domestic and international pressure to cut emissions in line with our targets or with global rates, then it is very much a race. We are already seeing global capital flows shifting towards low-carbon options. Just look at the problems Alberta oilsands are having getting global capital flows started again because they are dirtier dollars than other global options. And now as the world's three super-economies (US, EU and China) continue to clean up much faster than we are, they are going to be more open to stricter rules on emissions intensity. EU is already talking about carbon border adjustments. Canadians have been acting for decades like it isn't a "race" and as a result we keep falling ever farther behind. If you think that it doesn't matter if Canada falls ever farther behind the super-economies on our economic carbon intensity, then you're in luck. That's what Canada is doing.
Totally agree with Roy here. The format is skewed badly against countries with processing and manufacturing industry.
The focus of the article is on the "us bad". The other side of the chart highlights the enormous benefits of Nuclear energy. This is obviously not mentioned due the contradiction to another environmental propaganda storyline against Nuclear energy.