Project

As a country that experiences such a diverse range of weather and climate, Canada needs urgent action to address the most significant climate change challenges. Through a six-step process, the goal of the Climate Change Adaptation Project is to resolve these challenges and protect Canadians from climate change risks, while taking advantage of potential opportunities.

Steps

 

Completion

Develop ensemble climate projections for Canada
 
Oct 2010
24 experts identify key climate change challenges in Canadian human, economic and natural systems
 
Dec 2010
Adaptation Advisory Committee deliberate and vote to select the six most significant climate change challenges
 
Dec 2010
Experts conduct detailed research on policy recommendations that address the six major adaptation challenges
 
Mar-Oct 2011
A report identifying the major climate change challenges and recommendations for concrete solutions published and disseminated to government, businesses, NGOs, First Nations and the legal community
 
Feb 2012
Through active advocacy, build support for the implementation of report recommendations
 
2012

This multidisciplinary, cross-sector decision-making process has identified Canada’s most significant and immediate climate change challenges.

Did you know?

Canada's emissions of greenhouse gases, major contributors to climate change, rose 25% between 1990 and 2005.*

Driving a mid-size car about 5,000 kilometres results in about one tonne of emissions.*

In 2005, human activities released the equivalent of 747 megatonnes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere in Canada. 1 megatonne = 1 million tonnes.*

In 2005, energy production and consumption accounted for more than 80% of greenhouse gas emissions in Canada.*

Fossil fuels are burned to move people and goods. In 2005, transportation activities accounted for 27% of all greenhouse gas emissions in Canada.*

Energy makes up one-fifth of Canada's merchandise exports.*

As worldwide demand for energy has surged since 1990, GHG emissions from the production of exported energy have jumped 146%.*

Canada has about 0.5% of the world's population, but contributes about 2% of the total global GHG emissions.*

Canada has warmed in recent decades. The trend between 1948 and 2007 shows a 1.4 °C increase in annual temperatures in Canada.*

Temperature increases between 1948 and 2007 have been greatest in the Yukon, Northwest Territories and northern British Columbia.*

Glaciers in the Rocky Mountains are receding and thinning, resulting indecreases in flow during the critical driest months of the year in some rivers.*

Of the 853 glaciers inventoried in 1975 in the North and South Saskatchewan River basins, 328 have disappeared completely.*

The spread of the mountain pine beetle in the central interior of British Columbia has coincided with warmer winter extremes.*

By 2007, 13 million hectares of British Columbia was infested by the mountain pine beetle.*

Canada has experienced heavier precipitation, intense wind storms and less predictable weather patterns over the past five years.*

The winter of 2009 was ranked in the top 10 "wettest winters" between 1948 and 2009.*

As of July 1, 2009, the median age of Canada's population was 39.5 years, up 0.2 years from the same date last year and up 3.1 years from 1999.*

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