The great Canadian industry, as well as most of the "major emitters" of greenhouse gases (GHGs) as a major thermal power producers want Canada participates in the international market substantive exchange of emission credits for that the players do to take advantage of major mechanisms of the Kyoto Protocol, even if that Canada is catching up in the current second phase, which should begin after 2012. This has been indicated by a report submitted confidentially to the government in February by the Group Harper interprovincial and industrial GHG reductions, (Industry-Provincial or IPOG Offset Group), including the newspaper Le Devoir has obtained a copy. This shows that the players have integrated world economy that it could not be any growth prospects regardless of environmental constraints.
Without ever write once the word "Kyoto", the authors of this important report nonetheless offer in Canada to establish a market governed by regulatory objectives reduction to cover the period 2010-2015, three years longer than the five-year period of 2008-2012 cuts. That would give governments and businesses two years, 2008 and 2009, to make the system operational in Canada and would achieve tangible goals since 2010 by a first wave of projects.
While the IPCC has just submitted a report late 2006 alarming, it seems that the economic sector took the Canadian has environmental issue has the arm to the extent corp or lack of action at the national level is crippling their industry in export policy (especially to Europe), but also distorts competition between domestic enterprises and other affirmative. Indeed, the report of the IPOG believes that a "regulatory framework aimed at reducing emissions of greenhouse gases in Canada is inevitable."
Here are some companies that have participated in the IPOG: Shell Canada, Alcan, Canadian Association of cement, Canadian Gas Association, Dow Chemical ...
Without ever write once the word "Kyoto", the authors of this important report nonetheless offer in Canada to establish a market governed by regulatory objectives reduction to cover the period 2010-2015, three years longer than the five-year period of 2008-2012 cuts. That would give governments and businesses two years, 2008 and 2009, to make the system operational in Canada and would achieve tangible goals since 2010 by a first wave of projects.
While the IPCC has just submitted a report late 2006 alarming, it seems that the economic sector took the Canadian has environmental issue has the arm to the extent corp or lack of action at the national level is crippling their industry in export policy (especially to Europe), but also distorts competition between domestic enterprises and other affirmative. Indeed, the report of the IPOG believes that a "regulatory framework aimed at reducing emissions of greenhouse gases in Canada is inevitable."
Here are some companies that have participated in the IPOG: Shell Canada, Alcan, Canadian Association of cement, Canadian Gas Association, Dow Chemical ...
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