Alberta ending separate offices for climate change, environmental monitoring
EDMONTON — Alberta’s United Conservative government plans to eliminate its stand-alone offices for climate change policy and environmental monitoring, a move some say will damage the province’s standing and its ability to make science-based plans.
“What’s going to suffer is Alberta’s international reputation (and) our overall approach to science and evidence-based decision making,” said New Democrat legislature member Shannon Phillips, who was environment minister in the previous government.
The intention is outlined in a Sept. 10 email from Alberta Environment and Parks deputy minister Bev Yee, obtained by The Canadian Press.
Yee outlines a departmental re-organization under which the climate change office created during Phillips’ tenure will disappear. So will the environmental monitoring and science division, initially created as an arm’s-length agency in 2014 by the provincial Progressive Conservative government and brought back into government by the New Democrats.