N.W.T. can't fight climate change without federal help, minister says
CBC
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The N.W.T.'s minister of environment and natural resources says the COP26 UN climate summit in Scotland is an opportunity for the North to tell its unique climate change story and press the federal government for more help.
Shane Thompson said the N.W.T. accounts for 0.2 per cent of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions but is experiencing the effects of climate change three times faster than southern Canada.
"We've been living with climate change for the last 15 plus years," he said.
Thompson said he met with the mayor of Tuktoyaktuk recently, who showed him that the community will be underwater in 50 years because of climate change.
He said the territory is seeing permafrost melt, slumping, and river banks disappearing because of floods, like the one in Fort Simpson last May. And, he added, the N.W.T. experienced its worst wildfire season in 2014 when 3.4 million acres in the territory burned.
"When you put that in perspective, it's basically half the size of Scotland," he said.
"We're trying to get the message out there that, you know, we are experienced with climate change. We're living it."
Although the territory's contribution to Canada's overall greenhouse gas emissions appears low, per capita emissions are well above the national average. The territory says it's because of long distances between communities, an energy-intensive resource industry and long, cold winters.
The entire territory produced 1.4 megatonnes (or 1,400,000 tonnes) of greenhouse gases in 2019.
Thompson said the federal government needs to understand the territory needs more support from it to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
"We need to articulate that to the federal government and have them understand the impacts that we feel and that we need dollars for adaptation as well as the mitigation funding," he said.
"And you know, we saw [Canada commit] $37.5 million for adaptation for a Third World country. But, you know, in some cases, we are actually a Third World country when it comes to, you know, being able to foot the bill for some of the things that people are asking us to do."
Thompson said he supports the federal government in its goal of reducing carbon emissions but he wants to understand more what the prime minister is committing to and what exactly the federal government has in mind.