PEI

P.E.I. making little headway on emissions reduction targets, new data shows

P.E.I.'s emissions levels have remained largely unchanged since 2013, according to the latest figures released by Environment and Climate Change Canada.

Levels largely unchanged since 2013, as growth negates gains from electrification

Electric school buses.
The province aims to have all school buses on the Island running on electric power by 2030. (Brittany Spencer/CBC)

Prince Edward Island greenhouse gas emissions reached their highest level in eight years in 2021, according to the latest figures released by Environment and Climate Change Canada.

The province's total emissions for 2021 were 1,627 kilotonnes (kt), an increase of 2.8 per cent over the year before.

The year-over-year increase of 45 kilotonnes is roughly equivalent to the annual emissions from nearly 10,000 gas-powered passenger vehicles.

Overall, emissions increased across Canada in 2021, reflecting an economy bouncing back from pandemic restrictions.

For the country as a whole, the increase still left emissions below pre-pandemic levels.

But in P.E.I.'s case, the new figures show the province has made little headway toward its ambitious emissions reductions targets since 2013.

Steven Myers
Steven Myers, the province's environment, energy and climate action minister, says Prince Edward Island is still capable of achieving net-zero energy by 2030. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Under P.E.I.'s Net-zero Carbon Act, the province needs to reduce emissions to 1,200 kilotonnes or less by the year 2030. The province has pledged to reach net zero emissions by 2040, a decade earlier than the date set by the federal government.

Susceptible to effects of climate change

Provincial Environment, Energy and Climate Action Minister Steven Myers is confident that target is within reach.

He said every school bus on the Island will be electric by 2030. As well, the province aims to switch more motorists from gas to electric cars, and shift more commuters out of their cars altogether and onto public transportation.

"We're trying to get people to move from oil to electric heat at home, we're trying to displace as much oil as we can from our transportation system — so where we can, we're going to electrify," he said Tuesday.

"It's about transitioning our energy systems and trying to make them as close to net zero as we can by 2030."

As a province located on an island, P.E.I. is particularly susceptible to the effects of climate change. It was hammered last September by post-tropical storm Fiona, the second major storm to hit P.E.I. within three years.

Drone footage shows fallen trees in P.E.I. National Park, one year after post-tropical storm Dorian hit the area.
In September 2019, post-tropical storm Dorian caused major damage along P.E.I.'s North Shore — to be followed three years later by post-tropical storm Fiona. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Fiona knocked out power to the entire province, in some cases for three weeks, and caused significant erosion along parts of the Island's coastline.

Climate scientists have predicted warmer ocean temperatures will lead to more severe storms like Fiona in the decades ahead.

"The Government of Prince Edward Island recognizes its responsibility to lead by example and to continue to take action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions," according to a web site explaining the province's climate change action plan.

According to an update Myers released last fall, the province spent $19 million on efficiency programs in 2021-22. In that year, the province says it:

  • Processed 568 rebate applications for household solar photovoltaic systems.
  • Provided rebates for 335 battery-powered electric vehicles and 65 plug-in hybrids.
  • Approved 1,122 applications for free heat pumps through the province's income-tested program.

Caroline Lee of the Canadian Climate Institute in Ottawa says P.E.I. already has some of the policies needed to reach its targets, but will have to do more to reduce emissions from agriculture as well as transportation.

"Ambitious goals are important. Of course, the second piece of that is implementing policies that'll actually get you to those goals that you set. So that's where we see that P.E.I. needs to do a little bit of work," she said.