Features

Jan 212013
 
HamidKarzai

Without strong policing, locals fear return to 1990s civil war.

from Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

KABUL — Afghan officials and lawmakers are warning Washington not to consider a "zero option" of withdrawing all U.S. troops from the country after 2014.

"It is a factual possibility, it is possible that all [US] forces would withdraw from Afghanistan," Abdullah Abdullah, the leader of the opposition group National Coalition of Afghanistan and a former foreign minister and presidential candidate, told Radio Free Afghanistan. "But, if until that time the Afghan government does not fulfill its responsibilities, as it has failed so far, then the withdrawal will have a negative impact on the situation in Afghanistan."

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Jan 212013
 
EdgarSchmidt

Lawyer sues federal government for omitting rights check from new legislation.

by Dennis Gruending

Edgar Schmidt, a senior lawyer in the federal Department of Justice, has taken a courageous and highly unusual step. He has launched a court case against his employer for what he believes is its failure to protect Canadians against Parliament creating laws and regulations that could infringe upon their human rights.

On the day after Schmidt filed his claim with the court in December 2012, the department suspended him without pay and barred him from his office. That harsh action, in turn, did not amuse the Federal Court judge hearing the case. The court doesn’t like that, said Mr Justice Simon Noel. “We see that in different countries and we don’t like it… Canada is still a democracy.”

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Jan 172013
 

Proposed export pipeline will significantly expand tar sands industry.

from the Natural Resources Defense Council

WASHINGTON, January 17, 2013 — Scientists and advocates today unveiled new research showing that the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline would damage the climate much more than previously thought, by dramatically expanding tar sands production and because it will lead to increased combustion of a particularly dirty form of oil.

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Jan 162013
 

Most major economies have progressed in addressing climate change; only Canada has regressed.

by Stephen Leahy

UXBRIDGE, Canada, January 15, 2013 (IPS) — A majority of major economies have made significant progress in addressing climate change, with countries like South Korea and China taking aggressive action so they can benefit from energy- and resource-efficient economies, a new report released Monday found.

The study by GLOBE International and Grantham Research Institute profiled 33 major economies in an annual examination of climate and energy legislation. Thirty-two of them, including the United States, made significant progress in 2012, while only Canada regressed.

“The study reveals a major trend is underway. More and more countries are acting on climate,” said Adam Matthews, secretary general of GLOBE International, an organisation of legislators.

The political reality, Matthews said, is that local and national climate regulations and legislation must come first.

Although major international climate conferences such as the Conference of the Parties (COP) held in Doha in November and December 2012 have made little progress, at the local level cities, states and national governments around the world are taking action.

The political reality, Matthews told this reporter, is that local and national climate regulations and legislation must come first. “An environment minister in Doha couldn’t commit his country to an ambitious carbon reduction target unless the country has already decided to chart a new economic course,” he said.

Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, agreed with Matthews’ analysis. Countries do not have the “political space” to move at the international level unless they have already moved at the domestic level, she said in a statement.

“Domestic legislation is critical because it is the linchpin between action on the ground and…international agreement,” she said.

Wide-ranging discussion at local, regional and national levels will be needed before countries can draft and pass legislation that will actually shift their economies onto a low-carbon pathway.

Canada was the only country to reverse course by abandoning its climate obligations under the Kyoto Protocol. “Canada has clearly gone backwards. It is a great shame,” Matthews said.

In many parts of the world, these discussions are already taking place, with the study reporting significant progress in this area by 18 of 33 countries in 2012. Nearly all of the 18 countries are emerging economies such as South Korea, Mexico and China.

“What’s happening in South Korea is really impressive. They are striving to be the leader in the shift to a low-carbon economy,” Matthews said.

In 2012, South Korea passed legislation to begin emissions trading in 2015, while Japan introduced a carbon tax. Mexico passed The General Law on Climate Change to reduce its emissions by 30 percent by 2020. Bangladesh passed the Sustainable and Renewable Energy Development Authority Act. Kenya developed its Climate Change National Action Plan.

China has begun to draft its national climate change law, and local legislation was passed in the city of Shenzhen to manage greenhouse gas emissions.

China doesn’t get nearly the credit it deserves for its efforts to reduce carbon emissions, Matthews said. “Careers are being made there on making those reductions,” he added.

The United States made some progress with a regulation change that allowed the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate carbon emissions. Although the fossil fuel industry appealed, courts upheld the decision in late December.

Canada was the only country to reverse course by abandoning its climate obligations under the Kyoto Protocol. “Canada has clearly gone backwards. It is a great shame,” Matthews said.

Countries that take action on climate change understand that their national and local economies will benefit from improved energy efficiency and security, reduced costs and increased competitiveness, said Terry Townshend, co-author of the report.

“There is a major shift in the dynamic around climate. Countries are now seeing great opportunities for their national interests by taking action now,” Townshend said in an interview.

National climate-related legislation has surged in the past three or four years, although these laws aren’t always designated as climate legislation and instead are measures to improve energy use or reduce air pollution.

National climate-related legislation has surged in the past three or four years. Although these laws aren’t always designated as climate legislation and instead are measures to improve energy use or reduce air pollution, they do have positive impacts on the climate, Townshend said.

At the last UN climate conference in Doha, nations confirmed details for a new negotiation process with the goal of a new global climate treaty ready for ratification in 2015 and entering into force in 2020. If a new international climate treaty is to be ready by 2015, many countries will need to have national legislation in place or pending, Townshend added.

But this upcoming timetable may not take action soon enough. Climate scientists have warned that global carbon emissions must begin to decline before 2020 in order for a two-degree (Celsius) limit on climate heating to remain a reasonable possibility. Many countries, especially the least-developed ones and small island states, want the global target to be less than 1.5 degrees Celsius.

National legislation has a long way to go in order to keep a global temperature rise below two degrees Celsius, Townshend said. In order to help countries, the first GLOBE Climate Legislation Summit is being held this week in London, where senior legislators from 33 countries are meeting to share their experiences of putting domestic climate legislation into place.

“There’s a lot of experience, sample legislation and lessons learned to be shared,” he said. Between now and the end of 2015, GLOBE International hopes to facilitate more bilateral and multilateral meetings in order to help more countries become involved with domestic climate legislation.

“There is an awful lot of work to do, but this is a very positive development,” said Townsend.

Jan 152013
 
The founders of Idle No More.

Idle No More based on environmental issues as well as Treaty rights.

by Linda McQuaig

Those who believe we can freely trash the environment in our quest to make ourselves richer suffer from a serious delusion – a delusion which doesn’t appear to afflict aboriginal people.

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Jan 142013
 
AttawapiskatHousing

See the Attawapiskat struggle close up, courtesy of the National Film Board.

from the National Film Board

A new documentary by renowned filmmaker Alanis ObomsawinThe People of the Kattawapiskak River, exposes the housing crisis faced by 1,700 Cree in Northern Ontario. The dire situation led Attawapiskat’s band chief, Theresa Spence, to ask the Canadian Red Cross for help. With the Idle No More movement making front page headlines, this film provides background and context for one aspect of the growing crisis. This film will stream free of charge until Friday, January 18, 2013.

The People of the Kattawapiskak River

Source

Jan 142013
 
Armine Yalnizyan

Canada's growing income gap should worry us all, even the rich.

by Armine Yalnizyan

You couldn’t have made it through 2012 without running into a story about income inequality.  Chances are, it made you think about how you fit into the story.  That’s “entirely constructive”, as Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney called the awakening triggered by the global Occupy movement.

A year later, some people think it’s time you go back to sleep.  A new debate is emerging in Canada: is inequality worth discussing at all?  On the “no” side are four main arguments, all deeply flawed:

  • Canada is not like the US;
  • The growing gap is not growing in Canada anymore;
  • Income inequality is not an issue because people experience income mobility;
  • Income inequality is not the problem; poverty is.

Canada is indeed not like the US.  In countless ways, nobody does extreme like the US.  America may be more equal than Turkey, Mexico and Chile in the OECD block of the world’s richest nations.  But since the 1990s, Turkey, Mexico and Chile all reduced income inequality.  In the US, the gap between the rich and the rest grew, unabated.

After the mid 1990s, the gap grew in Canada because the rich did so much better than everyone else. So much for trickle down.

Andrew Coyne argues the gap is not growing in Canada, a position fuelled by a recent TD Bank report. That study said income inequality grew until the early 2000s then stopped increasing.  

But Miles Corak, an economist and international authority on the links between income inequality and social mobility, demolished both Coyne’s conclusion and the TD study. Corak’s blogs show income inequality has not stopped increasing in Canada, and offer better ways to measure it. He points out Canada is not immune to the many ways in which inequality threatens opportunity.

This skips over a more important question: why hasn’t Canada seen a reduction in income inequality?

In the decade before the global crisis, our economy was firing on all cylinders and employment rates reached record highs. From the mid 1990s to the mid 2000s, 15 of 32 OECD nations reduced income inequality. Not us.

Instead of harnessing our extraordinary track record of job creation and economic growth, Canada tumbled further down the inequality rankings than any other nation, slumping from above-average equality to below-average.  If such a buoyant market didn’t help close the gap, what will?

The Conference Board of Canada cautions that Canada’s levels of inequality mean squandered potential.

A year ago economist Stephen Gordon offered some insights on how to assess income inequality in Canada, noting it has grown constantly over the last 30 years, but in different ways.  From the 1970s to the 1990s inequality grew because more people lost ground at the bottom of the income distribution in the wake of two big recessions; after the mid 1990s, the gap grew because the rich did so much better than everyone else, seeing the lion’s share of income gains from economic growth.  So much for trickle down.

The Fraser Institute mounted the income mobility defence of the economy’s track record over the past generation.  Their recent study dismissed the rich-got-richer concerns by countering that the poor got richer too.  They emphasized that the poor have seen faster rates of growth in their incomes than the rich since the mid-1990s.

The Fraser Institute's idiosyncratic marshalling of the facts and interpretation of the evidence was enough to pull Statistics Canada’s former Assistant Chief Statistician, Michael Wolfson, out of retirement.  He publicly laid bare the deep methodological flaws in their study, and finished by reinforcing  that growing income inequality remains a serious issue in Canada.

That takes us to the last argument, and a critically important reminder: poverty should be of far greater concern than income inequality.

There’s an internal incoherence with this approach.  Unless you’re the type who is willing to go on  record saying  “let them eat cat food”  improving the lives of the poor means providing either more opportunity or more cold, hard cash.  That involves money, which is where follow-through usually falls off, because it means some form of redistribution. And that brings us back to the beginning.

The IMF has warned that higher inequality is correlated to shorter spells of growth, more market volatility. The Conference Board of Canada cautions that Canada’s levels of inequality mean squandered potential.  Just this week TD Bank CEO Ed Clarke acknowledged inequality in Canada has been growing for the last 30 years, raising a challenge  for society that demands discussion.

Whether you want less poverty or a more robust economy, greater innovation or improved productivity,  better life chances or a healthier democracy, the way forward in Canada involves reducing income inequality.   But markets, alone, don’t reduce income inequality, not even when the economy is chugging away at full speed.  So what can we do?

First, don’t dismiss the issue. Start a conversation about how we can reduce income inequality. The ideas will flow from across the political spectrum, because this isn’t a partisan issue. It’s a problem for everyone.

Income inequality has become as inconvenient a truth as climate change, and every bit as challenging to our future. It, too, has its share of deniers.  But the evidence that is accumulating around the world makes clear — burying the issue under a false sense of progress won’t protect us from the massively disruptive consequences of a growing gap. Stay awake. Start talking.

Jan 102013
 

Rights termination plans follow pattern since 1967.

by Russell Diabo

On September 4th the Harper government clearly signaled its intention to:

  1. Focus all its efforts to assimilate First Nations into the existing federal and provincial orders of government of Canada;
  2. Terminate the constitutionally protected and internationally recognized Inherent, Aboriginal and Treaty rights of First Nations. 

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Jan 082013
 

The New Year promises new strategies for old labor.

by David Moberg

On Black Friday, the biggest shopping day of the year, bargain hunters trying to enter 1,000 Walmart stores around the country had to maneuver through rallies and picket lines.

Tens of thousands of protesters turned out at the urging of a year-old worker association, Organization United for Respect at Walmart (OUR Walmart), to support roughly 500 workers who walked off their jobs that day, fed up with what they saw as Walmart’s inadequate pay, disrespectful working conditions and illegal punishment of workers who speak out.

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Jan 082013
 
Droughts are expected to become more common with global warming.

Irrigation rescued US Bread Bowl but Ogallala aquifer nearing depletion.

by Janet Larsen

On October 18, 2012, the Associated Press reported that “a massive dust storm swirling reddish-brown clouds over northern Oklahoma triggered a multi-vehicle accident along a major interstate…forcing police to shut down the heavily traveled roadway amid near blackout conditions.”

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