Guideline on community emissions reduction planning

ERO number
013-2083
Notice type
Policy
Posted by
Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change
Transferred to
Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks
Notice stage
Decision
Decision posted
Comment period
January 3, 2018 - March 4, 2018 (60 days) Closed
Last updated

This consultation was open from:
January 3, 2018
to March 4, 2018

Decision summary

We have finalized a Guide which will help municipalities and climate change practitioners to complete greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories and develop community emissions reduction plans. The Guide supports actions on climate change, energy planning, the Growth Plan, 2017 policies, and Ontario's Five-Year Climate Change Action Plan, 2016-2020

Decision details

A decision has been made to finalize the Guide “Community Emissions Reduction Planning: A Guide for Municipalities” following recent public consultation.

The purpose of the Guide is to provide direction to municipalities and other climate change practitioners in completing GHG inventories, setting interim and long term emission reduction targets, and developing community emissions reduction plans.  The ministry recognizes that municipalities are key partners in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

The Guide contains the following information which can be used to achieve measurable GHG reductions and help municipalities plan for low-carbon communities:

  • Rationale and contextual information on the role of municipalities in climate action planning and the relationship between land use and infrastructure planning and GHG emissions reductions;
  • A step-by-step process methodology, along with relevant information and resources for collecting data, completing GHG inventories, setting targets (which are recommended to align with provincial targets), modelling and scenario development, and developing community emissions reduction plans, including engagement;
  • Overview of land use and infrastructure planning and decision making tools which would ensure effective implementation of community emissions reductions plans (municipal official plans, zoning by-laws, corporate strategic plans, municipal asset management plans);
  • Outline of monitoring processes and performance measures which will provide an indication of whether the municipality has met the goals and objectives of their community plan; and
  • Overview of best practices, case studies, tools and resources, including funding programs, which municipalities and practitioners could explore to achieve the intended outcomes of the community emissions planning process.

The Guide was revised to address stakeholder comments received from public consultation. Revisions made to the draft Guide before it was finalized include: providing some additional contextual information, tools and resources; clarifying details on various climate change and energy programs; further explaining the means to collect data used for GHG inventories; adding examples of municipal policies and actions that can help to integrate community emissions reduction plans into municipal land use and infrastructure plans; and improving overall readability of the document.

Further detail on the changes made is outlined below.

Comments received

Through the registry

12

By email

18

By mail

0
View comments submitted through the registry

Effects of consultation

In addition to public comments received as a result of public consultation posting of the draft Guide, verbal comments and input was received through engagement sessions which took place throughout the posting period.

Comments received indicate support for the Guide as an implementation tool as well as appreciation for acknowledging the role of municipalities in climate action planning. The comments received can be summarized as follows:

  • Data acquisition for municipal GHG inventories is a challenge (time and resources) and the province could play a role in streamlining and centralizing data access and GHG emissions inventory process;
  • Ensure consistency and alignment between various provincial climate change and energy related programs (Municipal Challenge Fund, Municipal Energy Plan program) and clarify requirements, available funding, priorities and how programs are mutually supportive of local municipal action;
  • Include sample municipal Official Plans to highlight innovative practices and proactive policies that are less likely to be challenged, can give municipal planners further justification on need for planning, and provide direction on how to integrate community emissions plans into other land use and infrastructure planning processes;
  • Clarify relationship between regional/ upper-tier and local/ lower-tier municipalities in terms of population forecasting and setting per-capita emissions reduction targets;
  • More emphasis on other co-benefits of emissions reduction planning (health, social equity); and
  • Processes for engagement should be better integrated throughout the six planning stages; need to more clearly identify the range of key players such as utilities, municipally-owed electricity distributors, school boards, and others.

After careful consideration of all verbal and written comments received as a result of public consultation, the following revisions were made to the Guide:

  • Additional contextual information on the broader provincial framework relating to climate change and energy planning and how the Guide supports meeting requirements in the framework;
  • Clarifications on available climate change and energy planning programs and available funding;
  • Editorial revisions to improve readability and to clarify direction provided, including improved cross-references throughout the Guide, removal and repositioning of content, enhanced discussion of co-benefits, and factual corrections to legislative and policy framework;
  • Additional context on the importance of data collection and resources available to help with that part of the inventory;
  • Clarification of roles and responsibilities of upper-tier and lower-tier municipalities in setting per-capita GHG emissions reduction targets;
  • Inclusion of sample municipal Official Plan policies;
  • Enhancing references to the engagement process and expanding range of partners involved in community energy and emissions planning; and
  • Providing additional tools and resources to support community energy planning and implementation.

Comments regarding the role of the province in streamlining data collection efforts for GHG inventories are outside the scope of this Guide, but being considered further by the ministry.

Supporting materials

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Some supporting materials may not be available online. If this is the case, you can request to view the materials in person.

Get in touch with the office listed below to find out if materials are available.

Environmental Policy Branch
Address

40 St. Clair Avenue West
10th floor
Toronto, ON
M4V 1M2
Canada

Office phone number
Climate Change Directorate
Address

77 Wellesley Street West
Ferguson Block, 10th Floor
Toronto, ON
M7A 2T5
Canada

Office phone number

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Original proposal

ERO number
013-2083
Notice type
Policy
Posted by
Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change
Proposal posted

Comment period

January 3, 2018 - March 4, 2018 (60 days)

Proposal details

Description of policy

The Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change (MOECC) is seeking feedback on a draft Guideline which will support implementation of policies in the Growth Plan, 2017 and actions under Ontario’s Five-Year Climate Change Action Plan, 2016-2020.

Once finalized, the Guideline will serve as a resource tool for municipalities in completing greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories and developing community emissions reduction plans.

The draft Guideline builds on existing programs and protocols and information received from municipalities and other practitioners in order to be consistent with current practices in community emissions reduction planning.

The recommended approaches outlined in the draft Guideline can be tailored for a range of planning contexts (i.e. basic, intermediate, advanced) and focus on those sources of GHG emissions that are outlined in the Growth Plan, 2017 (i.e. at a minimum: transportation, buildings, waste management and municipal/ corporate emissions).

The draft Guideline contains the following information which can be used to achieve measurable GHG reductions:

  • Rationale and contextual information on the relationship between low carbon communities and land use planning, as well as information on municipal decision making and the role of municipalities in climate action planning;
  • A step-by-step process methodology, along with relevant information and resources, for completing greenhouse gas inventories, setting targets (which are recommended to align with provincial targets), modelling and scenario development, and developing community emissions reduction plans, including engagement;
  • An overview of land use and infrastructure planning and decision making tools which would ensure effective implementation of community emissions reductions plans (i.e. municipal official plans, zoning by-laws, corporate strategic plans, municipal asset management plans);
  • Performance measures which will provide an indication of whether the municipality has met the goals and objectives intent of provincial land use policies and CCAP actions related to climate change; and,
  • An overview of best practices, case studies, tools and resources, including funding programs, which municipalities and practitioners could explore to achieve the intended outcomes of the community emissions planning process.

Feedback from early engagement with municipalities and other practitioners involved in community emissions reduction planning has been reflected in the draft Guideline.

Purpose of policy

The purpose of the Guideline is two-fold:

  1. Provide implementation support to Growth Plan, 2017, policy 4.2.10 which requires municipalities in the Greater Golden Horseshoe to incorporate climate change policies in their municipal official plans and encourages them to complete greenhouse inventories, set targets, and develop emission reduction strategies; and,
  2. Support municipalities in conducting community energy and emissions planning under the Municipal Action Plan Program (name and program details still being developed) under the Five-Year Climate Change Action Plan.

Supporting materials

View materials in person

Some supporting materials may not be available online. If this is the case, you can request to view the materials in person.

Get in touch with the office listed below to find out if materials are available.

Environmental Policy Branch
Address

40 St. Clair Avenue West
10th floor
Toronto, ON
M4V 1M2
Canada

Office phone number
Climate Change Directorate
Address

77 Wellesley Street West
Ferguson Block, 10th Floor
Toronto, ON
M7A 2T5
Canada

Office phone number

Comment

Commenting is now closed.

This consultation was open from January 3, 2018
to March 4, 2018

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