Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 31, 2013, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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TOP NEWS
WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 2013
winnipegfreepress. com A 3
T HE Manitoba government is delaying a ban
on coal- fired heating, outlawing a dirty heating
fuel that's not used here and farming out
the development of new greenhouse- gas- emissions
targets.
That's the upshot of Conservation Minister Gord
Mackintosh's announcement Tuesday on the province's
post- Kyoto climate- change plans.
Manitoba had a comprehensive plan, released
five years ago, to meet its Kyoto targets - curbing
pollution to six per cent below 1990 levels. Despite
slowly shrinking emissions, those Kyoto targets
were never met, even though they are enshrined
in legislation.
Now, the province has tasked a Winnipeg environmental
think- tank with consulting the public
and industry to come up with more realistic shortand
long- term targets. The International Institute
for Sustainable Development will start consultations
this fall and hopes to have a report ready
within a year.
Mackintosh would not reveal what he believes
might be reasonable targets, saying the best way
to determine the way forward is through public
engagement.
" You have to engage Manitobans to decide
where we go from here. It impacts on everyday
life. It impacts on the economy. You have to have
eyes wide open," said Mackintosh. " We don't want
to make targets that aren't based on the Manitoba
experience."
In the meantime, the province is delaying one of
its climate- change initiatives and banning a heating
fuel not used in Manitoba.
After pushback from the Keystone Agricultural
Producers, the province is postponing a ban
on coal- fired heating, used mostly by large farm
operations and Hutterite colonies who need to
warm barns and workshops.
The ban, announced two years ago, was to begin
in January and already about half
of the 70- odd agricultural users of
coal- fired heat have converted to
greener fuel.
Now, the remaining users of
coal heat will have until July 2017
to convert to biomass - farming
or logging leftovers such as crop
stubble or sawdust that can be
burned for energy.
Another 200- plus rural homeowners
also heat with coal and
will have to convert to another heating source,
with the help of government grants.
The ban, when it comes into force, will save as
much as 100,000 tonnes of greenhouse- gas emissions.
That's about five per cent of Manitoba's
total emissions, not insignificant for a province
with few large point- source emitters.
The province is also banning the use of petroleum
coke for heating. " Petcoke" is a dirty but
cheap byproduct of oil refining. No one in Manitoba
uses petcoke for heating, so the ban pre- empts
fears the handful of people who heat their homes
or farms with coal might turn to cheap petcoke.
Only Graymont's lime plant near Moosehorn
uses petcoke, though not for heating. The company
runs its kilns mostly on coal and will pay a
new provincial emissions tax on its petcoke fumes
as it already does for its coal pollution. Graymont
is the province's fourth- largest point- source emitter,
though Mackintosh said the government is
working with the company on greener fuel options.
Graymont officials say they are open to
using more biomass.
Despite Manitoba's modest
progress on reducing emissions,
an environmentalist said Tuesday's
measures are a step in the
right direction. Bruce Duggan
is part of a group called 50by30
that wants Manitoba running on
50 per cent renewable energy by
2030, including the transportation
and home- heating sectors.
" I'm moderately hopeful," he
said. " But I think, actually, saying,
' Oh it's all the government's fault' is lame and
wrong. It's lame because we all know we could
have done more, and it's wrong because governments
don't actually control everything."
There was no mention in the announcement of
new green transportation initiatives such as transit
or curbs on urban sprawl even though vehicle
emissions make up more than one- third of the
province's emissions and are on the rise. There
was also no mention of wind energy or the creation
of a regional cap- and- trade system, a project
that has largely fizzled.
maryagnes. welch@ freepress. mb. ca
Rejigging climate- change plan
Industry, public
to be consulted on
post- Kyoto goals
By Mary Agnes Welch
MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Conservation Minister Gord Mackintosh says Manitoba needs realistic short- and long- term goals to cut greenhouse gases. It never met its Kyoto targets.
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5
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20
25
30
35
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' We don't want to
make targets that
aren't based on the
Manitoba experience'
- Conservation Minister
Gord Mackintosh
MANITOBA'S EMISSIONS IN 2011
. 2011 TOTAL: 19,500 kilotonnes . 2011 KYOTO GOAL: 17,200 kilotonnes ( six per cent below 1990 levels)
- source: Environment Canada
4%
Fugitive
sources
38%
Transport
20%
Energy
3%
Industry
30%
Agriculture
5%
Waste
A_ 03_ Jul- 31- 13_ FP_ 01. indd A3 7/ 30/ 13 9: 07: 15 PM
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