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© Lora Denis
Pinery Provincial Park © Helena Jacoba
Nature-based solutions to address the climate crisis are important and gaining popularity but they alone cannot address it effectively while the burning of fossil fuels – the primary driver of global heating and pollution – continues unchecked.
The connection between the burning of fossil fuels and worsening ecological and human health impacts is stark. And the need to stop the burning of fossil fuels is illustrated by the increased frequency, intensity and destructive tolls that fossil fuel-induced droughts, floods, hurricanes, heat waves (both terrestrial and marine), torrential rains and wildfires are taking on communities and ecosystems everywhere. Everyday impacts include worsening air and water quality, biodiversity loss, failing infrastructure, increasing prevalence of infectious diseases, food and water scarcity, and deteriorating mental and physical health.
While global climate talks have failed to achieve meaningful and sustained emissions reductions due in part to non-binding targets and vague deadlines, the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty (Fossil Fuel Treaty) is a different approach to mandate a fossil fuel-free future. By viewing fossil fuels through the lens of weapons treaties (fossil fuels are a weapon of destruction) and by leveraging past treaties’ best practices, the Fossil Fuel Treaty aims to achieve cooperation for a simultaneous global fossil fuel phase-out and equitable renewable energy transition.
The initiative is a three-pillar treaty that addresses the climate crisis by proposing a stop to fossil fuel exploration and expansion. It mandates a phase-out of existing fossil fuel production to keep in line with the targets of the Paris Climate Agreement while supporting a just transition to renewable energy.
To establish binding targets for reducing fossil fuel production and consumption with the goal of keeping global heating below the Paris Agreement targets and ensuring a healthy, safe and secure future, the Fossil Fuel Treaty proposes the creation of a comprehensive Global Registry of Fossil Fuels to provide vetted, public and transparent data on fossil fuel reserves. This is necessary to enable:
Global communities worked together to formalize the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in addition to treaties on chemical weapons, landmines, and ozone-depleting substances. These international treaties worked because they met several conditions:
Momentum is growing for the Fossil Fuel Treaty and its supporters include the Vatican, the World Health Organization, the European Parliament, Nobel laureates, academics, researchers, activists and a growing list of governments.
In July 2021, the City of Toronto became the second municipal government in Canada to endorse the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty, after the City of Vancouver endorsed it in October 2020. This follows the City of Toronto’s declaring a climate emergency and adopting an ambitious climate action plan called TransformTO in 2019. While not yet binding, the endorsement signals to provincial and federal levels of government that fossil fuel expansion cannot continue if we are to meet our climate targets and safeguard a livable and equitable future.
Learn more about the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty.
© Lena Morrison
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Nature-based solutions are essential but insufficient to combat the climate crisis while fossil fuel consumption continues unchecked, worsening environmental and health impacts globally. The Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty offers a promising, collaborative framework to phase out fossil fuels and transition to renewable energy, building on successful precedents set by international treaties for global cooperation and accountability.
I support fossil fuel reduction