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Editorial: Where鈥檚 action on the climate?

A year ago, the B.C. government sent a message that it was serious about a climate action plan by appointing a climate leadership team. Failing to act on the team鈥檚 recommendations sends a different kind of message.
A year ago, the B.C. government sent a message that it was serious about a climate action plan by appointing a climate leadership team. Failing to act on the team鈥檚 recommendations sends a different kind of message.

In May 2015, Premier Christy Clark announced the appointment of the 19-member team, plus several special advisers, that included an impressive cross-section: MLAs, academics, mayors, business leaders, environmentalists and First Nations chiefs.

The team鈥檚 mandate was to provide recommendations on maintaining B.C.鈥檚 climate leadership, updates to the province鈥檚 climate action plan, relationships with First Nations and collaboration with local governments.

The team was directed to complete its work by Nov. 30, 2015, which it did. The government promised to review the recommendations and form a final plan by March, which it didn鈥檛.

That inaction has angered some of the team鈥檚 members, seven of whom put their name to a commentary in the Times 91原创 this week calling on the government to follow through with its climate plan.

When a government appoints a panel to advise and make recommendations, it is not obligated to implement all the recommendations, but it should acknowledge the work of the panel and explain what it intends to do.

It鈥檚 an uneasy and difficult task to balance economic and environmental concerns, and creating the leadership team was a wise move. Ignoring the team鈥檚 efforts, though, would be unwise.

It would send a message that forming the team was paying lip service to climate action, little more than a public-relations exercise.