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Ottawa to Craft Climate Emergency Plan

Full Title: An Act respecting a Climate Emergency Action Framework

Summary#

This bill would require the Minister of the Environment to create and carry out a national “climate emergency action framework.” The goal is to help Canada meet, at minimum, its 2030 greenhouse gas (GHG) targets under the Paris Agreement, while fully respecting the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). It sets timelines for a public plan and a follow-up report to Parliament.

  • Requires a framework to reduce GHGs, developed with Indigenous peoples and civil society (Bill s. 4(1)).
  • Aims to ensure Canada meets at least the 2030 targets under the Paris Agreement (Bill s. 4(1)(a)).
  • Calls for a transition to a “green economy,” including more jobs in green energy, infrastructure, and housing (Bill s. 4(1)(b)).
  • Requires consideration of scientific knowledge and Indigenous science and knowledge (Bill s. 4(2)(b)).
  • Mandates tabling the framework in Parliament within 1 year and publishing it online within 10 days (Bill s. 5).
  • Requires a report on effectiveness, with conclusions and planned actions, within 3 years after tabling (Bill s. 6(1)).

What it means for you#

  • Households

    • No immediate new rules or costs. The bill creates a planning framework, not programs or fees (Bill s. 4–6).
    • Future policies could follow from the framework, but the bill does not specify which ones (Bill s. 4(1)).
  • Workers

    • The framework must include measures to increase jobs in green energy, infrastructure, and housing. It does not name specific programs, amounts, or timelines beyond the initial 1-year planning deadline (Bill s. 4(1)(b), s. 5).
  • Businesses

    • No new requirements are created by the bill itself. Any later regulations would come from future actions under the framework (Bill s. 4).
    • Firms in energy, construction, and housing may see new opportunities if the government later funds green projects (Bill s. 4(1)(b)).
  • Indigenous peoples

    • The Minister must consult Indigenous peoples when developing the framework (Bill s. 4(1)).
    • The bill must be read as upholding Indigenous rights under section 35 of the Constitution and requires full compliance with UNDRIP in the framework’s development and implementation (Bill s. 2(2), s. 4(2)(a)).
    • Indigenous science and knowledge must be taken into account (Bill s. 4(2)(b)).
  • Local governments and civil society

    • The Minister must consult “civil society,” which can include NGOs, community groups, and experts (Bill s. 4(1)).
    • No direct mandates or funding are set for provinces, territories, or municipalities (Bill s. 4–6).
  • Timing

    • Framework due to Parliament within 1 year of the Act coming into force; posted online within 10 days after tabling (Bill s. 5).
    • Effectiveness report due within 3 years after the framework is tabled (Bill s. 6(1)).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • No explicit appropriations or spending amounts in the bill text (Bill s. 1–6).
  • No new taxes or fees are created (Bill s. 1–6).
  • The bill assigns duties to the Minister and department (develop framework; table and publish reports), which may require administrative resources. Data unavailable.
  • No publicly available fiscal note identified.

Proponents' View#

  • Provides a clear federal duty to produce and implement a climate plan aimed at meeting at least the 2030 Paris target, addressing past gaps in follow-through (Bill s. 4(1)(a)).
  • Integrates rights protections by requiring full compliance with UNDRIP and upholding section 35 rights, which can build trust and better outcomes with Indigenous partners (Bill s. 2(2), s. 4(2)(a)).
  • Supports job growth by directing the framework to increase employment in green energy, infrastructure, and housing (Bill s. 4(1)(b)).
  • Improves accountability through firm timelines: plan within 1 year; public posting within 10 days; effectiveness report within 3 years with conclusions and planned actions (Bill s. 5–6).
  • Grounds policy in science and Indigenous knowledge, which may improve the relevance and effectiveness of measures (Bill s. 4(2)(b)).

Opponents' View#

  • Lacks specifics and enforcement tools. The bill says “ensure” Canada meets 2030 targets but sets no interim targets, sector caps, or penalties, which may limit impact (Bill s. 4(1)(a)).
  • No cost estimates or funding. Without appropriations or fiscal guidance, implementation could be slow or uneven (Bill s. 1–6).
  • May duplicate or overlap with existing federal climate plans unless integrated carefully, creating administrative burden. The bill does not state how it aligns with current policies (Bill s. 4).
  • Legal and process risk: requiring full compliance with UNDRIP and consultations may increase complexity or timelines if processes are unclear, potentially delaying action (Bill s. 2(2), s. 4(2)(a)).
  • Review cycle may be too long for a “climate emergency,” as the first effectiveness report can come up to 3 years after tabling, with no mandated interim progress reports (Bill s. 6(1)).

Timeline

Feb 26, 2020 • House

First reading

Feb 27, 2020 • House

Second reading

Climate and Environment
Indigenous Affairs
Labor and Employment
Infrastructure