Nothing has changed on this side of the border. Alberta remains the lone member of Carbonland though one may argue that Ottawa should be considered une île de carbone.
[Update: And, no, this plan won't get Alberta at ticket out of carbonland].
The good news is that, thanks in no small part due to provincial and state pressure, federal legislation in both countries could paint the whole map red. Real federal legislation is inevitable in the US, especially if the Democrats prevail as expected in the fall, and in Canada, especially if the Liberals force an election. Climate change is bound to be a prominent election issue here, so even the emissions intensity loving Conservatives will be forced to propose a real policy that features some type of carbon pricing and possibly even deals with the oil sands.
Nice chart, but somehow, your choice of colors...
ReplyDeleteI was going to say exactly the same thing as John. Love the chart concept but was confused by the colours, expecting green to represent progress.
ReplyDeleteGood idea though; shows change is a happenin' in Can-USA.
Matt
The Coffee House
Fair point about the colours. The original map was a twist on the popular Jesusland vs. the United States of Canada map that did the e-mail rounds after the '04 US election, so it used the same colour scheme.
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