Canada's Kyoto Mess

authordefault
onOct 6, 2006 @ 11:52 PDT

There’s a great piece by our friend Mitchell Anderson over at The Tyee this week. It’s a look at Canada and our relationship to Kyoto, and what role the oil companies have to play in thatโ€ฆ specifically, โ€œa deal quietly penned between Ottawa and Canadian oil industry in 2002 that essentially killed any chance Canada had to meet our obligations under Kyoto agreement.โ€

There’s a section about the oil sands, also, with a statistic that kind of took my breath away. Namely, that โ€œthe oil sands now consume 600 million cubic feet of natural gas per day โ€“ enough to heat 3.2 million Canadian homes.โ€ Umโ€ฆ Houston? We have a problem.

As usual at the Tyee, there’s lots of avid debate at the end. Kyoto sure is an issue that gets people goingโ€ฆ

authordefault
Admin's short bio, lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Voluptate maxime officiis sed aliquam! Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit.

Related Posts

Analysis
onNov 12, 2025 @ 12:15 PST

Our changing climate will produce winners and losers. Canada should look to the Global South for a winning strategy.

Our changing climate will produce winners and losers. Canada should look to the Global South for a winning strategy.
onNov 12, 2025 @ 08:10 PST

Jensen Huang gives "a shout-out for Secretary Chris Wright" as Nvidia and Trump administration partner on a massive AI buildout.

Jensen Huang gives "a shout-out for Secretary Chris Wright" as Nvidia and Trump administration partner on a massive AI buildout.
onNov 11, 2025 @ 06:27 PST

Register to watch on-the-ground coverageย from our team at theย COP30 climate talks in Belรฉm, Brazil.

Register to watch on-the-ground coverageย from our team at theย COP30 climate talks in Belรฉm, Brazil.
onNov 10, 2025 @ 13:42 PST

A summit billed as the last chance to revive global climate action faces unprecedented pressure from the food sectorโ€™s largest emitters.

A summit billed as the last chance to revive global climate action faces unprecedented pressure from the food sectorโ€™s largest emitters.