What's this, another Canuckian? Eh? =)
I'm a little miffed at this actually. I agree we need to do something about fighting climate change, but I don't think self-handicapping and damaging our own economy through Kyoto is the way to do it. Not to mention, opposition parties are expected to table legislation, yes... but tabling what amounts to a directive on how the government should be doing business? That's... unorthodox. I somehow don't think the Conservatives are going to listen, either.
And nobody wants an election.
The only people who have ever said that Kyoto will damage the economy have been the Conservatives. Everyone else feels that Kyoto will probably create net job gains as there will be need for skilled people to implement all the changes. All the retrofitting, upgrading, grants handed out, research projects, and so forth. I'm not at all convinced that this will hurt the economy...this is the usual rhetoric from the right wing parties both here in Canada and south of the border.
Even if it does hurt the economy...are you suggesting we do the alternative and let this thing get away when we had the chance to stop it?
Where are we getting these skilled people, praytell? We import engineers from all over the world but most of them end up driving taxes or cleaning public buildings because we don't accredit them here. We're short of tradespeople already. And I don't think shelling out cash in penalties because we can't meet the targets is a productive usage of funding. It would make more sense to divert those funds internally to fund changes in industry.
I don't have a problem with addressing climate change - I have a problem when we're not setting our own standards and doing what works in Canada.
Furthermore, and on a more pragmatic note: I'm a biologist. I see the miracles of life daily. I see how adaptive it is, how remarkably resilient. Even IF we muck up this plant so badly that it can no longer support human life (which the nagtive impact of which would make a very interesting debate) life will indeed go on. That's the great thing about evolution *crossthreads*. Life goes on even if we as a species die out. I fully believe that the human race will be the cause of its own destruction. And I don't really think that's a bad thing, because there isn't much else left to decimate us as a species and force evolutionary change.
Earth will be here, covered in life, long after we're gone, no matter what we do to her. Saying that "fixing" climate change is what's necessary for the planet's continued existence is foolish. The Earth is constantly changing its climate. We're nothing more than a minor blip on its developmental path.
EDIT: And while I confess to voting Conservative, I'm not technically "a Conservative." I'm mostly "NOT a Liberal"
