Barry Saxifrage
Climate Analyst | Vancouver
About Barry Saxifrage
Barry Saxifrage is Canada's National Observer's resident chart geek and climate analyst. In his visual carbon columns, Saxifrage deconstructs the data behind global warming and Canada's climate targets, as he charts international progress and graphically documents failures by industry and governments. His work is cited frequently by academics and climate publications internationally, including by George Monbiot in The Guardian, Yale Climate Connections, Bill McKibben's New Yorker newsletter, The Times Colonist, and many others. When he's not analyzing the corporate reports of major oil companies or comparing Canada's government's promises against Canada's actual emissions, Saxifrage is an avid soccer player.
Opinion: HFCs and Aviation head in opposite directions with global climate pacts
One commits to declining emissions. The other leaves them soaring.
Opinion: Trudeau's fire sale of BC's most critical emissions-rights
No society can thrive if their emissions rights are given away for just 1% of needed GDP.
Mind the climate gap, Mr. Trudeau
The UK is slashing climate pollution and meeting its climate targets. Canada, not so much. Here's where we've stumbled, and what they're doing differently…
Decision time for Trudeau: climate commitments or LNG legacy
The massive LNG proposal would blow out BC's legislated climate targets, but open new markets for Canadian fossil fuels. Prime Minister Trudeau wants both. Which will he choose?
Visualizing Canada's 2030 climate target: Show me the money!
Trudeau is searching for a way to meet Canada's climate commitments while also growing our economy. Here's what success would look like -- and what is driving failure.
Essential infographics for the climate-conscious traveller
Train, plane, bus or car? Here are your 2C-compatible travel options…
Industry's slower growth plans may not require more mega-pipelines
The big contentious pipelines -- Northern Gateway, Keystone XL, Energy East and Trans Mountain -- may not be needed after all.
UPDATE: Global heat records fall like dominoes, November joins the parade
Mother Nature is having a major cookout, and we're all invited.
Alberta's new climate policies explained: the missing infographic
Confused about Alberta's complicated new 2030 climate policy? I certainly was. Here's a visual tour that puts it all in perspective…
As carbon cuts loom, some Canadians have lots of clean energy, others none
In Canada, how much clean energy you have access to depends on where you live. Here's an illustrated province by province breakdown…