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.
Global heat records falling like dominoes as world heads to Paris
Here's an illustrated guide to the great 2015 cookout…
Everything you need to know about the last 20 years of climate conferences
Everything you need to know about the last 20 years of global climate conferences in one chart.
Surprise! Canada's a global leader in one area of climate action
Canadians have become world leaders in making electricity less climate pollution. Compared to the Americans...
With Canada's safe carbon budget too small for tar sands, hunt for solutions goes global
Ever wonder how much of the tar sands plans are compatible with Canada's safe climate budget? I did. Here's what I found out...
Tar sands vs Canada's safe carbon budget
Climate pollution from tar sands plans could easily wipe out the entire remaining safe carbon budget for all of Canada. Take a look...
Big Oil takes on King Coal: the climate fight shifts gears
Fossil fuels are starting to fight each other for remaining 2C Carbon Budget. King Coal is winning but Big Oil has started fighting back.
Are Canada's emissions too small to matter, or too big to ignore? Take a look
We Canadians are failing to live up to our climate promises. Does it matter? Here's a chart to help you decide.
Canada's new climate target: the good, the bad and the ugly
Canada just announced its climate pollution target for 2030. How does it stack up? Here are three key facts to help you decide.
The climate number that changes everything
The geeky number that went "wickedly viral" and how it is radically changing the fight for a safe climate future.
Canada's climate success within reach if the tar sands do their fair share
If oil sands did their fair share with their climate pollution, Canada would keep pace with USA and be within striking distance of our shared target. Here's what climate success would look like.