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What Does the Glasgow Climate Pact Mean for Canada?

November 18, 2021

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Written By Claire Lingley, Nohayla Benayad, Radha Curpen, Serge Dupont, Sharon Singh and Thomas McInerney

Following two weeks of negotiations between delegates from 197 countries, on Friday, November 13, 2021, COP26 concluded in Glasgow, Scotland, culminating in the release of the final COP26 decision, now known as the Glasgow Climate Pact.

The Glasgow Climate Pact reaffirms the goal to limit global warming to 1.5˚C and emphasizes the role of multilateralism in addressing climate change and its impacts. Additionally, the Glasgow Climate Pact notes the loss and damage that climate change has and will increasingly cause—a first, as previous decisions have not directly addressed loss and damage caused by climate change. Along with the mention of loss and damages is a call for collaboration across the private sector, multilateral development banks and financial institutions to enhance finance mobilization in order meet the need for resources required for adaptation.

For the first time in COP history, the Glasgow Climate Pact explicitly references the role of fossil fuels in the climate crisis. Initially the Draft COP decision, published November 10, 2021, asked governments to accelerate the phasing-out of coal and subsidies for fossil fuel. A focal point of negotiations, that language has been altered and now calls upon parties to "accelerat[e] efforts towards the phasedown of unabated coal power, and phase-out of inefficient fossil fuel subsidies…".

The Glasgow Climate Pact:

What Does This Mean for Canada?

COP decisions are integral to the development and implementation of the Paris Agreement. When COP decisions are adopted, there is a legitimate expectation of compliance from parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC), of which Canada is one.

Further, as part of the Paris Agreement, countries must update their nationally determined contributions (NDCs) plans setting out how a particular country plans to reduce emissions, every five years. NDCs were due in 2020 when COP26 was originally supposed to take place, however, due to the delay caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, countries were given the opportunity to prepare updated NDCs. In particular, Canada's updated 2021 NDC includes the commitment to reduce emissions by 40-45 percent below 2005 levels by 2030, an ambitious increase from Canada's original NDC, as well as the commitment to reduce its emissions to net-zero by 2050. Further, Canada's NDC commitment to power rural, remote, northern and Indigenous communities with reliable and clean energy by 2030 aligns with the Minister of Natural Resources' recent announcement of Canada's new partnership with International Renewable Energy Agency to support the transition to renewable energy in remote communities.

Canada's updated NDC, as well as the commitments made in the Glasgow Climate Pact, will impact the steps that Canada and its regulators will take to address climate change going forward.

Regulatory and Legislative Changes

Among those steps include the recent developments within Canada's securities regulatory authority, the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA), which signal that Canada, and its regulators, are taking action in line with the commitments under the Glasgow Climate Pact. Specifically, the recently published proposed National Instrument 51-107: Disclosure of Climate-related Matters (NI 51-107), (of which a more detailed overview can be found in our previous insight, Proposed New Climate-Related Disclosure Requirements) responds to calls from investors to standardize climate-related disclosures, as well as a growing convergence among regulators and investors to align disclosure with recommendations made by the Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD). The proposed rules reflect a larger awareness of the financial sector's increasingly vital role in addressing climate change through climate-related disclosure, and are expected to come into force sometime after December 31, 2022.

Specific pledges made by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the weeks leading up to and during COP26 indicate that regulatory oversight on climate change matters will continue to increase, posing further constraints on the private sector going forward, including:

The pledges go beyond existing policy, have significant ramifications for the energy industry in particular, and will require significant engagement with provinces and industry on matters of detail and implementation.

The Bennett Jones ESG, Climate Change & Emissions Trading and Public Policy groups will continue to monitor legal developments in this area in furtherance of our efforts to assist clients in understanding the challenges and maximizing the opportunities presented by Canada's movement into a low-carbon economy.

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