Today I joined Premier John Horgan, Minister George Heyman and Minister Michelle Mungall in Vancouver to announce British Columbia’s new CleanBC economic plan aimed at positioning BC as a leader in the 21st century, low carbon economy.

This announcement was very important to me as it represented the culmination of several years work. As anyone who watched the documentary Running on Climate will know, I originally ran for office in 2013 with the BC Green Party as a point of principle — I could not stand by and watch Gordon Campbell’s legacy of leadership in the low carbon economy be dismantled by the Christy Clark government.

Today’s announcement repositions BC on the path to realize a 40% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, relative to 2007 levels, by 2030.  What’s especially exciting about today’s announcement is that it re-emphasizes the reality that reducing greenhouse gas emissions will lead to economic opportunity and prosperity for BC.

Below I reproduce the speaking notes I was planning to follow (although I went off script) along with the accompanying press release, and my overall reaction to the plan (in video).


Speaking Notes


  • Over the last 150 years, Earth has made a transition from the past, when climate affected the evolution of human societies, to the present, in which humans are affecting the evolution of climate and weather.
  • What we are at risk of losing on this planet – what has already started to die off or slip away – is staggering.
  • And today, as I speak to you, we are at a pivotal moment in human history: Our generation is responsible for deciding what path the future climate will take.
  • We will either be complicit in allowing climate change to despoil our world – or we can fight for a different outcome for our children.
  • As Sir David Attenborough said Monday in Poland at the UN Climate talks, “If we don’t take action, the collapse of our civilizations and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizon.”
  • As a climate scientist, I have spent my entire adult life consumed by this threat and the opportunities that will come with it.
  • As a professor at the University of Victoria, my students would ask me, year after year, why so little progress was being made to combat climate change. In response I would encourage them to get involved with leaders who took global warming seriously or, if there were none, to consider running for office themselves.
  • I tried to take my own advice.
  • In 2007, I had the honour of being on the Climate Action Team that advised Premier Gordon Campbell.
  • That work led to B.C. becoming the first jurisdiction in North America to put a price on carbon.
  • B.C. stood as an example of how putting a price on carbon is perfectly compatible with prosperity.
  • Our emissions dropped as our economy grew.
  • And when I saw that leadership and progress being dismantled by the administration that followed, I put my name forward for public office.
  • I knew I would not be able to look my kids in the face if I didn’t do everything I possibly could to fight for their future.
  • That fight has not been easy.
  • But I am very happy and proud to be here today, to be here to say that it has been worth it.
  • By tackling climate change, with carefully designed policies, B.C.’s economy can grow in new ways.
  • CleanBC offers a pathway for B.C. to be on the cutting edge of the low-carbon economy.
  • This plan is a vital first step towards keeping B.C.’s climate commitments.
  • Climate change is daunting and overwhelming, yes, but within every challenge lies opportunity.
  • We worked hard to ensure that CleanBC is not just a climate plan – it is an economic vision.
  • It is not just the Ministry of Environment’s responsibility – it is an all. of. government approach.
  • B.C. has all the strategic advantages needed to seize low-carbon economic opportunities and this plan will ensure we maximize our full potential.
  • I have long believed that our children and grandchildren will ask us one of two questions when they look back at the beginning of this century.
  • It will either be: “How could you let this happen?”
  • Or, if we choose a different path, they will ask: “How did you solve this problem when so many said you couldn’t?”
  • To be a climate scientist one must be an optimist. Frankly, I’ve found it helps you survive politics too.
  • I am convinced my children will one day ask me the second question. And when they do I will answer:
  • “We prevailed because we worked together. We saw the threat and we knew we had to deal with it.”
  • I am greatly encouraged by the spirit of hope and collaboration in which this plan was written and thank the government, in particular Minister Heyman, for their efforts in this regard.
  • There is much work still to be done, but today I feel we are one step closer to that brighter future.
  • Thank you again, to everyone who has helped us get here.
  • Please join me in welcoming Minister Heyman.

Media Release


Weaver: B.C. climate plan offers pathway to low-carbon economy
For immediate release
December 5, 2018

VICTORIA, B.C. – Andrew Weaver, leader of the B.C. Green Party, says the CleanBC plan released today offers a pathway for B.C. to be on the cutting edge of the low-carbon economy. Weaver says the plan is a vital first step towards keeping B.C.’s climate commitments and looks forward to building on this progress in the months ahead.

“This plan offers a pathway for B.C. to have a thriving low-carbon economy,” said Weaver.

“Climate change is the most significant challenge facing humanity. Each megatonne of carbon we take out of the equation will bring us closer to limiting global warming, in turn limiting the economic damage, social upheaval and human suffering threatened by climate change. British Columbians should be proud that this plan can make a difference.

“Within every challenge lies opportunity. This is why we worked hard to ensure that CleanBC puts a vision for B.C.’s economy at its centre. B.C. has all the strategic advantages needed to seize low-carbon economic opportunities and this plan will ensure we maximize our full potential. I am greatly encouraged by the spirit of hope and collaboration in which this plan was written and thank the government, in particular Minister Heyman, for their efforts in this regard.

“This has been a year of hard choices for our Caucus. The decision of the government to go ahead with LNG was a low point. I will always argue that the development of new large fossil fuel infrastructure is inconsistent with our commitments under the Paris Agreement. But this plan, and the preliminary work we have done on how we will achieve the remaining reductions, give me confidence that our targets may be within reach and that they are certainly worth fighting for. I am pleased that the plan will be backed up with funding in the next budget, and that the government has agreed to enact an accountability framework to hold the current and future governments to account.

“Climate change will test every modern leader and history will judge each of us by our actions. We must come together around our shared desire to secure a bright future for our children and grandchildren and advance every available solution to limit global warming. This will require us to sit at the table with people from across the political spectrum and stay at the table even when we don’t always get exactly what we want. The scale of this challenge calls on us to ask not what is the least we can do, but what is the most we can achieve.

“This plan is a commendable start and I am proud of the work we have done to get it to this point, but we need to keep pushing forward. The time for decisive action is now and we will keep fighting for better.”

-30-

Media contact
Jillian Oliver, Press Secretary
+1 250-882-6187 | jillian.oliver@leg.bc.ca


Video of Overall Reaction


3 Comments

  1. ClaytonA-
    December 7, 2018 at 1:15 pm

    Sir,

    Using carbon prices is a economic and social competitive advantage compared to other climate change tools such as technology funds. Let others use more expensive methods.

    With LNG, I was expecting further carbon price increases. Perhaps an accelerated increase from $5/t per year to $7-10 per year with the associated hard discussions about how with all stakeholders. Perhaps even legislation extending the $5/t per year raise to 2030. Perhaps carbon pricing could have been coupled with some capital spending tax treatment/credit for all business emissions intensive and trade exposed?

    Respectfully this plan appears to push some of those hard discussions further into the future continuing the trend of pushing action into the future. Anecdotally media has reported how “easy” some of the discussions were, perhaps an indication that the provincial government could have, at the margin, been more aggressive or invested a little more political capital than they did.

  2. December 7, 2018 at 9:00 am

    Mr. Andrew Weaver, what are your thoughts on future megadams in BC including Site C, as outlined by the Federal Liberals climate action plan? Given that we are proposing to subsidize LNG by helping to make it ‘cleaner’ with the destruction of Site C, and it seems to be Federal Policy to build a hundred or more such dams to mitigate the removal and burning of our oil and gas resources in the same way, I’m just wondering if the Green party supports that strategy.

    The other given is that the reduced rates LNG would pay for power, compared to what Site C would cost ratepayers, amounts to an additional $500 Million in subsidies to an industry that has produced itself into a no market situation. In what way does this allow for a free market economy?

  3. Ian Theaker-
    December 6, 2018 at 11:24 am

    Kudos to John Horgan, Andrew Weaver, George Heyman and the many activists and civil servants who contributed to the CleanBC climate action plan! Very glad to see BC again taking effective action to ensure our communities and businesses prosper through reducing emissions.