Hope is Blowing in the wind for British Columbia
Hope is blowing in the wind for British Columbia
BY TZEPORAH BERMAN,
SPECIAL TO THE SUNAUGUST 12,
2009COMMENTS (36)
Standing under the mesmerizing blades of the new wind energy park up at
Dawson Creek last week was a moment to celebrate: The gentle giants at British
Columbia's first wind farm are now feeding clean electricity onto the grid.
The most striking thing about the new wind farm is how utterly normal it
all seems. Looking out over Mike's Steak House to the ridge in the distance,
the wind park is simply a quiet symbol of hope in a world addicted to fossil
fuels.
I also couldn't help but think: frankly it's about time. Given all the
chatter about B.C.'s climate leadership, you would think windmills and solar
panels would be as common as in Germany.
We're often lulled into thinking we're "green" because of the
big hydro dams built by previous generations. But three-quarters of the energy
used in B.C. -- to move us around, heat our homes and run our economy -- still
comes from fossil fuels. And whether B.C. will catch up to our neighbours is
now in question since the regulators, government and BC Hydro are tangled in a
quasi-judicial conflict at the BC Utilities Commission. Will future clean
energy projects get bogged down in a swamp of legal-sized paper?
We really can't allow that to happen. With record temperatures and fires
raging, British Columbians are seeing the dangers of a hotter planet first
hand. The blanket of heat trapping gases already in the atmosphere means we've
only seen the beginning. It is imperative that we do our part to eliminate
fossil fuels as quickly as possible.
We are among the luckiest people on the planet and B.C. has enviable
advantages. With the base load power from the big hydro dams backing up a
modern renewable grid, B.C. can build a model for a fossil fuel-free world. It
will take aggressive action by government, the private sector and all British
Columbians to promote efficiency, clean energy and switch off fossil fuels by
deploying technologies like electric transit and vehicles.
Similarly, our federal representatives need pressure. Canada has become
known as one of the "bad boys" of international climate negotiations
and Ottawa is allowing incentives for renewable power to run dry. The next
climate negotiations are coming up this December in Copenhagen.
A clean energy economy is within our grasp, but it needs focus. The
Obama administration is outspending Canada 14-1 (per capita) in its green jobs
surge towards a new energy economy. The Europeans are out ahead. And now China,
South Korea and other Asian nations have joined the clean energy race in a
massive way.
It's not as widely known as it should be that B.C. has some of the most
innovative and promising clean-tech companies in the world. We can make massive
cuts in our energy consumption. We can green buildings and urban planning. We
can take our homes and factories and transportation off fossil fuels. There is
reason for hope but no time to waste.
And we have our own contradictions to deal with. Ramping up fossil fuel
production in the North is a huge source of carbon emissions. We are still
mining and exporting coal. And we should not even be considering pipelines from
the tar sands to tanker ports on our west coast.
Instead we can focus on using energy much more wisely. I know this
sounds dull but it is hugely important and the gains are impossible without
public acceptance of conservation policies -- through voluntary programs, sure,
but we also need to support changes to our cities, more dynamic pricing and
harnessing the potential of a "smart" grid. And legislation like
Japan's "top-runner" law, where the most inefficient products are
regularly removed from the market, driving companies to be ever more efficient.
The transition off fossil fuels also requires effort and acceptance from
all of us. We can match legislation like Ontario's new Green Energy Act to spur
clean energy development. We can demand that our governments impose ever
stricter caps on carbon pollution as well as constantly stricter mandates on
buildings and vehicles.
Did you know that China has stricter vehicle standards than the new ones
proposed for Canada? Or that Warren Buffet is betting his fortune on electric
cars made in China? Clearly we can raise our game.
British Columbians can be justifiably proud that our province broke the
Canadian logjam of inaction on global warming and clean energy. But we
shouldn't underestimate the scale of the challenge ahead. It is time for a
renewed leadership effort.
Tzeporah Berman is executive director of PowerUP Canada.
In : Ontario Green Energy Act 2009
Tags: green energy act renewable economy hydropower small hydro wind power solar power hydro power tzeporah berman