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Federal election: Which party has the best climate plan? Here鈥檚 where they stand

Written by Cameron Roberts for .

The coronavirus crisis gives us a golden opportunity to make our society more sustainable, as  and  around the  have already noted. Just like how the oil crises of the 1970s led many countries to , the pandemic has given us a chance to rethink many aspects of our society 鈥 including our dependence on fossil fuels.

But the question of how to do this is tricky. The findings of socio-technical transitions researchers, who study large-scale technological change, can help us evaluate whether the climate platforms being put forward in this election will achieve what they say they will.

Liberals: Emphasizing innovation

Up until now, the Liberals have relied heavily on carbon pricing 鈥 an approach that has received . Carbon taxes reduce the problem to individual choices, ignoring the role played by infrastructure, regulations and industry structure.

Fortunately, the  expands on the carbon tax. The Liberals have a clear plan not just to develop new low-carbon technologies, but to , through support for electric vehicle charging and smart grids, for example.

The Liberal plan does not, however, say much about social or economic change to complement their proposed technological change. For example, the Liberals have an electric vehicle plan, but say very little about the .

And their plan to reduce emissions from the oil and gas sector ignores the fact that the biggest problem with the fossil fuel industry is .

The Liberal plan, despite its impressive detail, is insufficient for broad systemic change. It does not address topics like demand, consumption, urban planning or the structure of daily life.

Conservatives: No at-large plan

The Conservative plan focuses on . The Conservatives would, for example, replace the carbon tax with a low-carbon savings account, which people would pay into every time they buy fossil fuels. This money could then be spent on low-carbon purchases, such as electric vehicles or more efficient boilers. For industry, the Conservatives propose tax breaks for the first five industrial facilities to implement a new low-carbon technology.

The problem with this approach is that it individualizes the problem and does nothing to address bigger issues of infrastructure, logistics chains, standards and other systemic factors that .

True, the Conservatives do have some plans to develop infrastructure 鈥 such as for electric vehicles. But even here, the justification for focusing on electric vehicles on the grounds that 鈥溾 indicates an unwillingness to tackle the reasons why our cities are so car-dependent.

 

A new technology must first fit into existing systems before it can stretch it into something else. Cars, for example, had to be able to drive on roads built mainly for bicycles and horses before anyone would think about building a highway.

The Conservative platform is all fit and no stretch: They want to make low-carbon technology more accessible on an individual basis, but they have no plan for a wider transformation.

New Democrats: Two birds, one stone

The  proposes to use climate policy to achieve economic and social change. The NDP plan for worker retraining is by far the most detailed and will soften the blow for workers who are displaced from fossil fuel-intensive industries. They also propose to support community-owned renewable energy projects, which can help build local support for , and to link low-carbon housing with their affordable housing agenda.

The NDP also has a serious plan for tackling energy demand. Their low-carbon transportation plan prioritizes public transit, walking and cycling alongside an electric vehicle strategy. Their plan to improve internet provision to rural areas to enable more working from home has a similar logic to it, although unfortunately evidence suggests that working from home might actually .

The NDP clearly understands that linking social and economic benefits to environmental ones is an important way of ensuring that good climate policy remains politically viable.

Bloc Qu茅b茅cois: Regional side benefits

The  emphasizes side benefits of green transitions for the province of Qu茅bec: a hydroelectricity powerhouse and a global mining centre. Existing Qu茅bec industries can produce ,  and . Beyond supporting these industries, the Bloc also proposes a regional Qu茅bec alternative to Via Rail Canada.

In addition to prioritizing side benefits, the Bloc are wise to enlist support from . As with the Conservatives, however, the Bloc Qu茅b茅cois鈥 plan emphasizes support for established players and falls short on embracing large-scale change.

The Green Party: Mandate, but no details

The Greens have an aggressive plan, which includes .

The Green platform ticks a lot of important boxes: They propose retraining for workers, a national renewable-powered grid, and a coherent national transportation network including high-speed rail, light rail and electric buses. Their practical plans for how to achieve this range from international agreements to patent law.

This is a good plan, although in some places it lacks both detail and systemic scope for how change will actually happen in practice. The promise to simply 鈥渕andate and support鈥 a faster transition to renewable energy in transportation, for example, gives no understanding of what this support would actually look like.

Managing the transition

The parties鈥 climate plans differ mainly on the question of which specific part of the transition they account for. Different parties place different levels of emphasis on innovation, consumption, political support and industrial support.

Unfortunately, an effective climate plan that can actually enact a large-scale transition away from fossil fuels requires working hard in all of these areas at once. Transitions are multifaceted and involve codependent changes in technology, infrastructure, regulations, consumption habits and many other areas. A good climate plan should combine into something greater than the sum of its parts.