Strengthen Bill S-5 to make Canada's environmental protection law more just

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Jane E. McArthur: Strengthen Bill S-5 to make Canada's environmental protection law more just cdnpoli (subs)

Strengthen Bill S-5 to make Canada’s environmental protection law more just

A modernized Canadian Environmental Protection Act with a stronger legislative framework for assessing and controlling toxic substances—including greenhouse gasses—and protecting the right to a healthy environment is an urgent priority. Minister of Environment and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault, pictured on Nov. 22 alongside Labour Minister Seamus O'Regan. A modernized CEPA is our best defence against current-day threats such as air pollution, the plastic crisis, endocrine-disrupting chemicals in the products we use every day and ongoing colonization, writes Jane E. McArthur.

 

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It's time to re-establish Canada's leadership in ecosystem restorationWe are now two years into the United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, which was launched in 2020 to urge the world to take action to slow, halt, and even reverse nature loss. This UN call to action challenges the nearly 200 participating countries to embrace nature-based solutions for climate mitigation, reverse biodiversity declines, and support human livelihoods, all to shape a more sustainable society. Today, countries are still grappling with how to achieve impactful and lasting ecosystem restoration results. Canada can lead this global effort on our journey to meet conservation commitments, but only through collaboration, investment, and cross-sector engagement. This is a familiar position for Canada. We were at the forefront of global restoration efforts in the 1990s, when societal consensus developed around the need to reclaim and restore degraded lands. Over time, restoration efforts have expanded to address the challenges of urbanization, land conversion, and invasive species. These efforts have even filtered down to the grassroots level in Canada to grow programs like pollinator gardens in schoolyards and community invasive species removal initiatives. Still, the looming threats of accelerating climate change and biodiversity loss demand we do more restoration, faster, at a much larger scale. Because Canada is still losing ground on ecosystem loss. Lisa McLaughlin is vice-president of conservation policy and planning for the Nature Conservancy of Canada. Photograph courtesy of the Nature Conservancy of Canada The country has lost more than two-thirds of its grasslands—ecosystems that store carbon, filter water, and feed communities. Similarly, southern Ontario’s wetlands have dwindled to less than 30 per cent of their historic land cover, meaning numerous at-risk species have lost their habitats, and some of our communities’ greatest natural buffers against flooding and drought have vanished. These losses can be slowed, halted, and even reversed, b A convicted criminal & his boss now endangering our lives with punitive, ineffective, radical dictates on how we live, what we eat, drive, say... This video sums it up well. Def. worth repeating.
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