Ottawa using 'creative accounting' on its 2 billion tree pledge, environmental watchdog says
CBC
Canada's environmental watchdog says Ottawa is using "creative accounting" to support the claim that its program to plant two billion trees is exceeding targets.
Commissioner of Environmental and Sustainable Development Jerry DeMarco told CBC News that Natural Resources Canada (NRCAN) is using trees planted under a different program — and a different department — to boost its numbers.
"It's creative accounting," DeMarco told CBC. "It's certainly within their prerogative to do that.
"But to achieve the benefits for climate, biodiversity and human health, adding trees is needed. Not simply finding trees and other programs that have already been planted and saying, 'Oh, this now counts, we've got a higher number than anyone expected.'"
In August, Natural Resources Canada revised interim numbers on its progress toward the target of planting two billion trees by 2030-31.
By 2022, NRCAN was supposed to have planted 90 million trees. NRCAN says that, to date, it has planted approximately 110 million trees.
The department initially said it had planted 29 million trees in 2021. It now says it planted 83 million trees that year.
The French language website and newspaper Le Devoir first wrote about the change to the way the government reports the number of trees planted.
In a statement, NRCAN said it revised its 2021 figure by adding millions of trees planted through partner programs like Environment and Climate Change Canada's Low Carbon Economy Fund (LCEF).
"Data from the LCEF program … was received and validated against the two billion tree program's objectives this summer," said Keean Nembhard, press secretary for Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson.
In 2022, the department said it had planted 28 million trees through its partners, missing its interim target for that year of 60 million.
Conservative MP Greg McLean, who sits on the House of Commons environment committee, said the Liberals are being disingenuous with their math.
"Let's admit to Canadians what this is. This program was a bit of a virtue-signal in the first place," McLean told CBC.
Wilkinson said in an interview with CBC's Power and Politics that when the government announced its two billion trees initiative, it confirmed it would rely on other programs.
The Rachel Notley government's consumer carbon tax wound up becoming a weapon the UCP wielded to drum the Alberta NDP out of office. But that levy-and-repayment program, and the wide-ranging "climate leadership plan" around it, also stood as the NDP's boldest, provincial-reputation-altering move in their single-term tenure.