Tuesday, October 05, 2021

COP26's success rests partly on global climate fund promised in 2015 — and it's short billions

Canadian environment minister tasked with arm-twisting

 nations for additional funding

Glasgow's historic downtown steeple warns of the climate emergency ahead of the UN COP26 conference, which begins there at the end of October. (Stephanie Jenzer/CBC)

Climate scientist Saleem Huq says the world should prepare for a big letdown when the UN climate conference gets under way next month in Glasgow, Scotland.

One of the major accomplishments of the Paris climate conference in 2015 was the promise that the world's richest nations would contribute to a $100 billion US fund that developing countries could draw upon to help speed up their economic transition away from fossil fuels. 

But six years later, that pot of money still doesn't exist. 

Have questions about climate science, policy or politics? Email us: ask@cbc.ca. Your input helps inform our coverage.

"They just failed to do it," said Huq, director of the Dhaka-based International Centre for Climate Change and Development and a prominent voice on the topic in low-lying Bangladesh, which is especially vulnerable to climate-related emergencies such as floods and rising sea levels.

"That strikes me as being totally incompetent and negligent."

With time running out before the start of the 26th Conference of the Parties (COP26), host Britain has delegated the difficult task of trying to wrangle the missing billions to Canada — and Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson in particular.

Although he was re-elected in the Sept. 20 federal election, Wilkinson says he doesn't know if he'll be re-appointed to the environment portfolio in the upcoming cabinet. Regardless, he says he made the decision to head to Europe this week to try to twist some arms.

Environment and Climate Change Minister Jonathan Wilkinson has been tasked with drumming up money from richer countries for the $100 billion US climate transition fund for developing nations. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

The Italian city of Milan is hosting several crucial pre-COP26 gatherings this week, including a ministers meeting along with a summit of activists and youth leaders.

"We're working right now to corral commitments from all countries so that we're making progress toward that $100 billion," Wilkinson told CBC News in an interview before flying to Milan.

"I don't think there's been .. an organized effort to try to pull all of these threads together and to look at where we might find additional resources."

Wrangling money

COP26 organizers have set three key "deliverables" as the bar for success in Glasgow.

In addition to the financing deal, there's the commitment of ambitious emissions reduction targets from each nation — especially the biggest polluters — to keep global warming to less than 1.5 C above pre-industrial levels, as well as a timetable to make the burning of coal history.

Of those three priorities, raising the transition money should have been the easiest, says Huq.

Bangladeshi climate scientist Saleem Huq, seen during a Skype interview with CBC, said richer nations have had six years to collect the money they promised. (CBC News)

According to an OECD analysis, the total amount pledged to date for the fund was last pegged at $79 billion. Last week, President Joe Biden said the U.S. — one of the world's largest per capita emitters — would double its own contribution to more than $11 billion.

Huq said that falls short of what's required. The U.S. "owes probably five to 10 ten times more than it has given, in [light] of its own historic emissions."

In June, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Canada would double its commitment to the international climate fund to $5.3 billion over five years.

Wilkinson refused to name specific countries that he believes need to cough up more money, nor would he give an exact figure of what he's looking to raise.

WATCH | Global inaction is a key concern ahead of COP26:

Inaction and inequity keyconcerns ahead of COP26 climate summit

6 days ago
2:06
As world leaders prepare for next month's COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Greta Thunberg is criticizing governments for not living up to their promises while others are pointing to concerns about the inequity facing countries most impacted by climate change. 2:06

Dropping coal is key

Huq is disheartened by the state of co-operation and the likelihood that the world's richer nations will deliver what they have promised.

It's also clearly a worry for British Prime Boris Johnson, who vowed to make the Glasgow event a "turning point for humanity."

His government has kicked the equivalent of $15 billion into the fund, but Johnson has said he sees only a 60 per cent chance that countries will come through with the outstanding money.

Wilkinson said he believes predictions of the Glasgow summit's failure are premature.

"The most important first step the world can take [in reducing emissions] is to accelerate the phase-out of coal, and certainly to stop the construction of new coal-fired power plants," he said.

He noted that China, which releases more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere than any other country, recently said it would stop financing new coal-power plants abroad. 

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has vowed to make the Glasgow event a 'turning point for humanity.' (Daniel Leal-Olivas/Reuters)

But to the disappointment of Glasgow organizers and climate campaigners everywhere, China still hasn't come out with a concrete timetable for reducing its own emissions to help hit the 1.5 degree target.

A UN report earlier this month contained little in the way of optimism that the target is even reachable anymore. After examining the pledges made by nations so far, it concluded global emissions would be 16 per cent higher in 2030 than in 2010 — far off the 45 per cent reduction by 2030 that scientists say is needed.

The question of inclusion

The city of Glasgow, meanwhile, is slowly gearing up for its moment in the global spotlight. 

In the city centre, the 400-year-old Tolbooth Steeple has been transformed into a minute-by-minute reminder of what's at stake if COP26 fails to deliver.

Glasgow's city council has beamed a projection of a countdown clock that ticks down the years, days and hours to when it will be too late to stop the planet from warming past 1.5 C, which is in less than seven years' time.

If that happens, there's broad scientific consensus that the result will be more extreme weather events, drought, greater economic losses and destruction of marine life.

There are ongoing concerns that the persistence of COVID-19 and the U.K.'s strict border measures will limit the participation at COP26 of many advocacy groups who claim they are already shut out of the formal talks.

A venue for COP26 on the banks of the River Clyde. (JF Bisson/CBC)

"We've got a situation where a lot of the people who should be at COP are not able to come," said Mim Black, a Glasgow-based climate justice activist.

The U.K. has promised to ensure any official delegate in need of a government-approved vaccine to enter the country will get it, but Black says that pledge does not extend to thousands of activists and campaigners who also want to attend.

Despite significant challenges, Wilkinson believes COP26 has the potential to build on the work of previous climate summits.

"I don't think we're necessarily going to resolve everything at Glasgow," he said.

"But I think what we need to do is show a big step forward in terms of global momentum. And I am very hopeful that we are going to see that, certainly on the international climate finance side of things."

Minister corralling $100B climate funds

 says he’s ‘cautiously optimistic’ on its

 delivery

By David Lao Global News
Posted October 3, 2021

WATCH : 06:43  Environment Minister ‘cautiously optimistic’ about securing                 $100-billion climate change fund on time

Canada’s environment minister says he’s “cautiously optimistic” that he, and his German counterpart, will be able to convince enough countries to help fund a $100-billion climate change pledge ahead of the rapidly approaching U.N. climate talks in Scotland next month.

Speaking with The West Block’s Mercedes Stephenson, Jonathan Wilkinson said that the fund, which is specifically earmarked to help developing countries fight climate change, was a “critical piece” in the Paris Accords’ architecture.

READ MORE: Climate change might be spiraling out of control. What does that mean for Canada?


According to Wilkinson, both Canada and Germany agreed to help corral the money in advance of the 2021 United Nations climate conference, also known as COP26, after funding for the program had slowed.

“We have been spending a lot of time over the last couple of months doing that, and certainly the last couple of days were meeting with a lot of countries to twist their arms about being more ambitious with respect to climate finance,” said Wilkinson, who at the time had spent several days in Milan for the conference’s final set-up in agenda.

“I would say that I am cautiously optimistic that we are going to be able to deliver on that when we get to COP. But of course, there’s still a bit more work for us to do over the coming days.”

2:04 Canada leads effort for $100-billion climate fund

On Friday, Wilkinson said that both Canada and Germany were making “a lot of progress” in their efforts and that he had spent the last two days in Milan in a series of bilateral meetings with some of the world’s most powerful and richest countries.

More than 10 years ago, those same nations had collectively agreed to raise $100-billion in climate financing a year by 2020 in order to help fund the developing worlds’ efforts to adapt and mitigate against climate change.

READ MORE: ‘Climate migrants’: Report warns 200 million could be pushed out of homes by 2050


Last month, the OECD revealed that those developed countries were US$20 billion short of that $100-billion goal — and with those wealthy nations producing a majority of the emissions responsible for destabilizing the planet’s climate and warming it at an increasingly rapid rate — Wilkinson and Germany’s environment state secretary Jochen Flasbarth both agreed to help get them to cough up the cash.

“I would say that we have made a lot of progress and certainly Germany and Canada are working very hard to ensure that we can and we will deliver on the $100-billion commitment,” said Wilkinson on Friday during a telephone news conference from Milan.

While he confirmed that no new promises of the cash had been announced by other countries yet, he said that he was given assurances by a number of them about incoming funding commitments.

1:23 COP26 president calls $100-billion climate finance pledge “vital”

Luckily for Wilkinson and Flasbarth, some of that gap had been bridged before taking up their efforts in July to round up the money in July.

Canada promised to double its funding to $1 billion a year over the next five years and Germany committed to at least US$7 billion by 2025.

READ MORE: ‘Code red for humanity’: Climate change spiraling out of control, U.N. report says


U.S. President Joe Biden had also fulfilled his promise to rejoin the Paris Agreement — an agreement former president Donald Trump backed out of, ending U.S. climate financing.


2:15 “Eyes of the world” will be on Scotland for climate summit, Queen Elizabeth says

Biden however said he’d double the U.S. contribution to the fund by 2024, earning praise from Wilkinson who added that the financial commitment was “critical” for them to hit that $100-billion goal.

A report documenting what has been promised so far and how Wilkinson and Flasbarth intended to get the rest is expected to be published later in October.

“But at the end of the day, we are facing an existential threat,” said Wilkinson.

“It’s not a question of whether we reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It’s about how we do it.”

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.


 

Graphene: 'Miracle material' singled out for COVID conspiracies

Graphene, the material of the future?
Graphic on the characteristics of graphene, the material of the future?

Graphene, a Nobel Prize-awarded material with promising applications for greener energy and nanomedicine, has been the topic of much disinformation by coronavirus anti-vaxxers claiming it can be used to "magnetize" and "control" people.

What is graphene?

Often referred to as a "miracle material," graphene is one of the world's strongest materials, and one of the lightest.

A form of carbon just one atom thick—many times thinner than a human hair—graphene is transparent, but stronger than steel.

It was aired as a theoretical substance in 1947, but for decades, physicists thought it would be impossible to isolate.

The problem was resolved in 2004 by scientists Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, who used ordinary sticky tape to lift a layer from a piece of graphite—the stuff in pencil lead.

That layer was itself pulled apart using more tape, and the process repeated until just the thinnest of layers remained—a .

In 2010, the pair received the Nobel Physics Prize for their efforts.

Graphene, a super conductor of heat and electric energy, is "among the most promising materials for technologies of the future," Argentine chemistry researcher Marcelo Mariscal, a specialist in nanotechnology, told AFP.

It is the focus of research into the manufacturing of ultra-strong but lightweight and flexible electronic devices, satellites, airplanes and cars, greener alternatives to batteries, and a delivery vehicle for gene or molecular therapy—potentially also for use in vaccines.

What is the link to COVID-19 vaccines?

As has been the case with 5G and microchip technology, graphene has been the subject of several "trojan horse"  according to which governments or powerful individuals are supposedly seeking to remotely "control" people who receive some sort of mini device through coronavirus vaccines, or track their whereabouts through GPS.

This control could be exercised from 5G towers transmitting signals to people supposedly carrying graphene particles, one theory goes.

In another widely-disseminated claim,  alleged they had been "magnetized" by the vaccine, posting images of magnets, coins or cutlery allegedly attached to the arm in which they received the jab.

Some conspiracy theorists have claimed that vaccines containing graphene have altered people's "electromagnetic field" and that this can be fatal.

What is the truth?

To start with, none of the vaccines approved for use by the World Health Organization contain graphene or its derivative, .

Conspiracies were fueled when Canada in April recalled certain anti-coronavirus facemasks with a graphene layer over concerns that inhaled particles inhaled could cause asbestos-like lung damage.

In July, their sale was resumed after a review found that "biomass  are not shed from these masks in quantities that are likely to cause adverse lung effects."

Experts also dispute the alleged magnetizing properties of graphene.

The material "is magnetic only in very specific laboratory conditions," Diego Pena of the Spanish Research Centre for Biological Chemistry and Molecular Materials told AFP.

A video of a brain autopsy widely circulated on social media as evidence of the alleged lethal effects of graphene in a vaccinated person, was in fact from a patient with bleeding on the brain, and filmed before COVID-19 was even identified.

Experts say the hype about 's promising applications—most of them still in the research phase—have contributed to it being a popular target for disinformation.

"The material is known, everyone knows it's real, but not everyone understand how it works," said Ester Vazquez Fernandez-Pacheco, director of the Regional Institute for Applied Scientific Research (IRICA) in Spain.

It is, therefore, "very easy to make people believe things that have no scientific basis."

Graphene is 3-D as well as 2-D

© 2021 AFP

Phytoplankton: Why These Tiny Oceanic Creatures Are Essential to Tackling Climate Change

SUNDAY OCTOBER 3, 2021
Mar Benavides
Research scientist, Institut de recherche pour le développement (IRD)

Fluorescence images of Crocosphaera. Image: Mar Benavides/Author provided



The ocean withdraws about one quarter of the CO₂ in the atmosphere, mitigating climate change and making life possible on Earth. An important share of this CO2 is removed thanks to phytoplankton, tiny marine creatures that use light to do photosynthesis, just as plants or trees on land. These cells fix CO2 to build up biomass and multiply, and take it down to the deep ocean when they die and sink. Phytoplankton are thus the basis of the marine food chain, and their productivity not only affects CO2 levels, but also fish catch and the world economy.

So why does phytoplankton go unnoticed to most of us, if they are so important? Try to find them in your next visit to the aquarium, you may have a hard time. Most phytoplankton species are 100 times smaller than the ants in your garden, meaning you need a really powerful magnifying glass (a microscope!) to study them. From our coasts to the middle of the ocean, phytoplankton are widespread and getting to know them requires some seafaring.
Phytoplankton are the Samaritans of the Ocean

Phytoplankton however need a key ingredient to be active: nitrogen. Just as fertilisers or legume plants are necessary to grow crops on land, nitrogen provides the nutrient value that phytoplankton need to grow in the ocean. Getting enough nitrogen in the ocean can be cumbersome. Coasts receive nitrogen through rivers or upwelling of deep waters rich in nitrogen, but most of the ocean is too remote to benefit from these sources.

To make matters worse, the surface tropical ocean is warm, making mixing with deep and nutrient rich waters very difficult. These “oceanic deserts” are great extensions of clear blue water which altogether make about 60 percent of the global ocean surface. How is life possible there without nitrogen? Luckily, other tiny creatures, diazotrophs, exist in these deserts

Diazotrophs come to the rescue performing a Herculean service : transforming inert nitrogen from the air into juicy nitrogenous forms available to phytoplankton. This transformation involves a great energy investment for the diazotrophs, to end up giving that nitrogen away to the community. Diazotrophs are the true Samaritans of the ocean.

Their crucial mission is likely to be impacted by climate change. Pollution, acidification, loss of oxygen and warming are among the negative effects of our economic development and ever-increasing population growth. Climate change is already impacting how much nitrogen reaches the ocean through changes in currents circulation, increased agricultural nitrogen loading through rivers, or atmospheric inputs through industrial activities.

But, how will climate change affect the activity and diversity of diazotrophs? It is hard to say when we even don’t know how many are out there and how diverse they are. Only about five species of diazotrophs have been studied in the ocean, and climate change simulation experiments have been only tested on two. Global circumnavigation expeditions have found that diazotrophs are much more diverse than we thought. Constraining their responses to the changing climate is crucial for predicting the ocean’s future productivity. The much larger diversity of diazotrophs implies not only overall higher provision of nitrogen to the oceans, but also higher efficiency and perhaps greater resilience to change, which awaits to be verified.


Experiments testing the response of diazotroph cells to simulated climate change scenarios expected until 2100, as part of the NOTION project
. Photo: Mar Benavides

A Lens into the Future

The project Notion will look into the future of phytoplankton via a diazotroph lens. In the lab, we will recreate climate change conditions and observe how diazotrophs respond to them.

We will answer questions such as : does the extra CO2 in the water affect their growth? Do diazotrophs give even more of the “fertilizer” nitrogen away to other organisms in a high CO2 world? Global models of ocean circulation and phytoplankton species distribution already exist, but they need to be improved with experimental data to predict how our ocean will look like in the future. NOTION will integrate new global datasets and new experimental data to integrate the lacking information in models. We will thus transform biology into mathematics, using the response behaviour of diazotrophs as trends projectable to different future climate change scenarios.

With these tools, we aim at providing a better understanding of the ocean’s response to climate change, which will be critical for a sustainable use of the ocean and its resources, and essential to evaluate its capacity to act as a sink of CO2 in our near future.

The research project “Notion” of which this publication is part was supported by the BNP Paribas Foundation as part of the Climate and Biodiversity Initiative program. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

We Just Got Closer to Pinpointing a Major Moment in Earth's Evolutionary History

(Sciepro/Science Photo Library/Getty Images)

NATURE
CARLY CASSELLA
4 OCTOBER 2021

For the vast majority of animals on Earth, breath is synonymous with life. Yet for the first 2 billion years of our planet's existence, oxygen was in scarce supply.

That doesn't mean Earth was lifeless for all that time, but that life was rarer, and vastly different from what we know today.

It was only when more complex bacteria that could photosynthesize stepped onto the scene that everything began to change, triggering what scientists call a Great Oxidation Event. But when did all this happen? And how did it all shake out?

A new gene-analyzing technique has provided the hints of a new timeline. The estimates suggest it took bacteria 400 million years of gobbling sunlight and puffing out oxygen before life could really thrive.

In other words, there were likely organisms on our planet capable of photosynthesizing long before the Great Oxidation Event.

"In evolution, things always start small," explains geobiologist Greg Fournier from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

"Even though there's evidence for early oxygenic photosynthesis – which is the single most important and really amazing evolutionary innovation on Earth – it still took hundreds of millions of years for it to take off."

Currently there are two competing narratives to explain the evolution of photosynthesis in special bacteria known as cyanobacteria. Some think the natural process of turning sunlight into energy arrived on the evolutionary scene quite early on but that it progressed with "a slow fuse". Others think photosynthesis evolved later but "took off like wildfire".

Much of the disagreement comes down to assumptions about the speed at which bacteria evolve, and different interpretations of the fossil record.

So Fournier and his colleagues have now added another form of analysis to the mix. In rare cases, a bacterium can sometimes inherit genes not from its parents, but from another distantly related species. This can happen when one cell 'eats' another and incorporates the other's genes into its genome.

Scientists can use this information to figure out the relative ages of different bacterial groups; for example, those that have stolen genes must have pinched them from a species that existed at the same time as them.

Such relationships can then be compared to more specific dating attempts, like molecular clock models, which use the genetic sequences of organisms to trace a history of genetic changes.

To this end, researchers combed through the genomes of thousands of bacterial species, including cyanobacteria. They were looking for cases of horizontal gene transfer.

In total, they identified 34 clear examples. When comparing these examples to six molecular clock models, the authors found one in particular fit most consistently. Picking this model out of the mix, the team ran estimates to figure out how old photosynthesizing bacteria really are.

The findings suggest all the species of cyanobacteria living today have a common ancestor that existed around 2.9 billion years ago. Meanwhile, the ancestors of those ancestors branched off from non-photosynthetic bacteria roughly 3.4 billion years ago.

Photosynthesis probably evolved somewhere in between those two dates.

Under the team's preferred evolutionary model, cyanobacteria were probably photosynthesizing at least 360 million years before the GEO. If they're right, this further supports the "slow fuse" hypothesis.

"This new paper sheds essential new light on Earth's oxygenation history by bridging, in novel ways, the fossil record with genomic data, including horizontal gene transfers," says biogeochemist Timothy Lyons from the University of California at Riverside.

"The results speak to the beginnings of biological oxygen production and its ecological significance, in ways that provide vital constraints on the patterns and controls on the earliest oxygenation of the oceans and later accumulations in the atmosphere."

The authors hope to use similar gene analysis techniques to analyze organisms other than cyanobacteria in the future.

The study was published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

In first, ocean drone captures footage from inside hurricane

In first, ocean drone captures footage from inside hurricane
NOAA and Saildrone Inc. are piloting five specially designed saildrones in the Atlantic
 Ocean to gather data around the clock to help understand the physical processes of
 hurricanes. Credit: Saildrone

In a world first, US scientists on Thursday piloted a camera-equipped ocean drone that looks like a robotic surfboard into a Category 4 hurricane barreling across the Atlantic Ocean.

Dramatic footage released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration showed the small craft battling 50-feet (15 meter) high waves and winds of over 120 mph (190 kph) inside Hurricane Sam.

The autonomous vehicle is called a "Saildrone" and was developed by a company with the same name.

Powered by wind and 23 feet (seven meters) in length, it carries a specially designed "hurricane wing," designed to withstand punishing conditions as it collects data to help scientists learn more about one of Earth's most destructive forces.

Saildrone's website indicates it can record measurements like  and direction, , temperature, salinity, humidity and more.

Video footage from on board Saildrone 1045 in Hurricane Sam on Sept. 30, 2021.

"We expect to improve forecast models that predict rapid intensification of hurricanes," said NOAA scientist Greg Foltz in a statement.

"Rapid intensification, when hurricane winds strengthen in a matter of hours, is a serious threat to coastal communities," and data collected from uncrewed systems will help improve models, he added.

Scientists warn that  is warming the ocean and making hurricanes more powerful, posing an increasing risk to coastal communities.

Video footage from on board Saildrone 1045 and animation showing location in Hurricane Sam on Sept. 30, 2021.
Hurricane Ida turned into a monster thanks to a giant warm patch in the Gulf of Mexico
More information: www.noaa.gov/news-release/worl … rom-inside-hurricane

© 2021 AFP

Two new solitudes — rural and urban — now define the Canadian political landscape

What does it mean for a democracy when geography 

and politics overlap?

Justin Trudeau drives a tractor at the International Plowing Match and Rural Expo in Walton, Ont., on Friday, September 22, 2017. Research suggests a rural-urban split between Liberal and Conservative supporters has been deepening since the 1960s. (Chris Donovan/Canadian Press)

According to Elections Canada, the metropolitan areas of Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver — the country's three biggest cities — account for 116 of Canada's 338 ridings. And the results in those ridings help to tell the story of both the Liberal victory and a fundamental split in federal politics.

Of those 116 ridings, the Liberals won 86 — more than half of their national total. The Conservatives won just eight.

That Liberal strength in cities is part of an urban-rural split that now defines the electoral map in Canada. New research suggests the urban-rural divide between the Liberal and Conservative parties has never been wider.

But that split raises questions that go beyond partisan competition

That new research was produced by professors David Armstrong and Zack Taylor of Western University and Jack Lucas from the University of Calgary. Using data on population density, location, economic activity and social diversity, they developed a new measure of "urbanity" that allows them to track long-term trends in party support since Confederation.

What they found is that Canada's two major parties began to diverge in the 1960s: Liberal support began to get more urban, Conservative support began to get more rural. That trend accelerated after the Canadian Alliance and Progressive Conservative parties merged in 2003 to become the modern Conservative Party. The gap between the two parties was larger than ever before in 2019.

Then it got even bigger in 2021. According to the work done by Armstrong, Lucas and Taylor, the Liberals won all 25 of the most urban ridings in Canada and 109 of the top 150 most urban ridings. The Conservatives won just 23 of those urban ridings.

This graph -- produced by Lucas, Taylor and Armstrong -- shows the relationship between riding vote share and riding urbanity for the Liberals and Conservatives across every election since Confederation. Positive values indicate urban advantage; negative values indicate rural advantage. (Jack Lucas/University of Calgary)

Identity and party

Of the 150 least urban ridings, the Liberals won 34 while the Conservatives took 81.

An urban-rural political divide is not unique to Canada. But there could be many reasons explaining why Canadian politics has developed this way — everything from economic and social trends to policy choices to the lasting significance of political foundations that were built 60 years ago.

"On one side, Prime Minister [John] Diefenbaker's identity as a small town Prairie lawyer, and his bitter criticism of business and media elites in Canada's big cities, may have pushed professionals and wealthy voters in urban areas away from their traditional loyalties," the researchers write.

Did John Diefenbaker's public identification with rural Canadians over urban 'elites' drive a wedge between his party and city-dwelling Canadians? (Chuck Mitchell/Canadian Press)

"At the same time, a profound transformation inside the Liberal Party, in which a set of highly educated urban professionals came to play a leading role both as strategists and political candidates, appears to have increased the Liberal Party's appeal in the urban context."

To some extent, the divide might be accentuated by the first-past-the-post system, Taylor said. Though a colour-coded electoral map might suggest otherwise, there are still people living in rural Alberta who vote Liberal and residents of downtown Toronto who vote Conservative.

Polarization and policy

The dangers of polarization have been evident across Western democracies over the last six years. But the existence of an urban-rural divide in voting patterns isn't necessarily cause for panic — even if it's always important to mind the gaps.

"What I worry about is that when parties become uncompetitive in each other's turf for very long periods of time ... they can't recruit good candidates, they can't be visible to voters. And as a result, they don't really hear what people in those regions want and what their hopes and aspirations and fears are," Taylor said in an interview.

"And that means that there's kind of a policy tin ear for whichever party manages to cobble together a winning coalition."

After the 2019 election, some observers expressed concerns about a lack of Western representation in Justin Trudeau's cabinet. Before that, Stephen Harper had to go to extraordinary lengths to find cabinet ministers from Vancouver and Montreal.

In their own study for the Public Policy Forum earlier this year, Peter Loewen, Sean Speer and Stephanie Bertolo used survey data from the 2019 election to compare public opinion in 84 rural ridings with the views held by voters in the other 264 "non-rural" ridings.

Divided on the big questions

The researchers stressed that "most disagreement between urban and rural Canadians is a matter of degree rather than fundamental principle" and "there is ultimately more that connects than separates urban and rural Canadians." But they also found notable differences on a few big issues: climate change and carbon taxes, immigration and trust in government.

Those could be some of the defining political issues of the next 30 years. But how much those differences matter, Lucas said, might depend on whether urban and rural areas are simply moving along the same trajectory at different speeds or are actually diverging.

Climate change activists and a few counter-protesters supporting the oil and gas industry gather for a march and rally with Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg at the Alberta Legislature Building in Edmonton on Friday, Oct. 18, 2019. (Dave Chidley/The Canadian Press)

"People disagree in politics, along many dimensions. There are differences in the average policy positions of Canadians on gender and on region and on age and on any number of other things, including place of residence. And those disagreements in themselves are part of what it means to have competitive democratic representation," Lucas said.

"Where they turn into polarized politics is when they're connected to misperceptions of 'the other' and also kind of resentment where anything that is going to benefit the other side must be a bad thing."

'Somewheres' and 'anywheres'

In an increasingly urbanized country, the party best able to appeal to urban voters might have a significant advantage. But the Liberal Party's dominance in urban Canada doesn't absolve the Trudeau government of the responsibility to speak and act with all Canadians in mind.

That same responsibility to avoid stoking resentment can be applied to the Conservative Party. Last year, Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole flirted with the idea that the world could be divided between "somewheres" and "anywheres."  He didn't stick with that thesis, at least publicly, but the Conservative platform did state that the country can't afford "a recovery for downtown Toronto" alone.

Nothing about politics in a democracy is destined to continue uninterrupted. At some point, the electoral map might end up looking very different.

For now, the urban-rural split is a window into how federal politics has developed over the last 60 years. But, with any luck, what unites urban and rural voters will continue to transcend their differences.

‘This is ridiculous’: BC Hydro questioned after mass stranding of salmon on Cheakamus River

By Simon Little Global News
Posted October 4, 2021

The death of potentially thousands of pink salmon in the Cheakamus River has prompted questions about how BC Hydro manages water levels in some of its reservoirs. Christa Dao reports.




The death of potentially thousands of pink salmon in the Cheakamus River has prompted questions about how BC Hydro manages water levels in some of its reservoirs.

It happened Thursday night and into Friday morning, when the Crown corporation reduced the spill release from the Daisy Lake Reservoir into the river, stranding fish who had moved closer to the banks.

“I was taken aback, I couldn’t believe what I saw,” professional angling guide Clint Goyette told Global News.

“The amount of dead and dying fish was something I’d never seen before in the adult phase of life of these pink salmon.”

BC Hydro says it had increased outflow from the reservoir into the river earlier in the week, as the South Coast was battered by a heavy rainstorm.

Once the storm let up, it says it began to “slowly reduce flows” on the river, a “ramp down” process completed on Saturday.

“Our ramp down plan follows the protocols discussed with First Nations, stakeholders and agencies developed through the Cheakamus Adaptive Stranding Protocol (CASP) over the past few years,” a spokesperson said in an email.

“The plan is consistent with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans guidelines. It applies ramping rates with smaller changes over longer periods of time to allow fish movement from potential stranding sites.”

Hundreds of dead fish seen on the Cheakamus River. Global News

The power company added that crews were on site to try and move fish from any areas likely to be “dewatered,” and to save as many stranded fish as possible.

It said there was not a firm estimate yet on the number of fish stranded, but that there would be a debrief with local First Nations and stakeholders to improve future ramp downs.

Goyette, who along with a number of other local volunteers spent hours on Friday trying to save as many fish as possible, said he only saw two BC Hydro employees on the river.


Conservationists blame BC Hydro for fish kill – Oct 3, 2019

He said the company needs to do better, particularly given a similar mass-stranding on the Cheakamus two years ago, brought about by the same type of post-storm river draw down.

“I think they need to take a good hard look at how they deal with these rain events — they’re nothing new,” he said.

“Here we are two years after the last adult kill, and we’re in the same boat, the same scenario has occurred … what do we need to do to prevent this from happening in the future?”

Jonathan Moore, an SFU professor and head of the school’s Salmon Watersheds Lab, said the incident highlights the tricky balance a company like BC Hydro faces as it tries to manage a watershed.

READ MORE: Fish die-off in Vancouver’s Lost Lagoon under investigation

“This event though does showcase that there’s continued need to work on this in order to avoid events like this — and there is a history of this type of event in this watershed,” he said.

“Hopefully this will be given a hard look at, but I imagine if the water was ramped down more slowly, at a rate that wasn’t as fast, then this might not have happened.”

0:32 Mystery of what’s killing fish in Stanley Park’s Lost Lagoon – Sep 21, 2021

Moore said it was too early to assess what potential impact the die-off could have on the local pink salmon population’s viability, but that both adult and juvenile fish from this year’s run could have been affected.

“Fish could have gotten killed, but also their nests or their ‘reds’ could have gotten dewatered. This is an important time for salmon,” he said.

READ MORE: Environmentalists, fish farm spar over mass fish die-off at Vancouver Island facility


Moore said the incident raises several questions, including whether protocols were properly followed in reducing water levels, whether those protocols need to be reviewed given the higher frequency of storms amid climate change, and what the cumulative impact of repeated strandings has on the salmon population.

It’s a question Goyette also raised, noting that the salmon populating the Cheakamus are also a crucial contributor of food and fertilizer to the entire region.

“If you interrupt this lifecycle, we’re going to lose nutrients, we’re going to lose the ecosystem essentially,” he said.

“They’re a critical species here — this is ridiculous.”

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