- a deliberate act, typically as part of a systematic campaign, that causes human suffering or death on a large scale.
The report – called the Provincial Climate Change Impact Assessment – projects a soaring number of days with extreme heat across Ontario, as well as increases in flooding and more frequent wildfires.
None of the news is good, but it does underscore for anyone with critical thinking skills the folly of the Greenbelt theft.Its 530 pages are filled with often grim details about the expected effects of climate change in Ontario, including:
The agriculture sector faces risks of "declining productivity, crop failure, and livestock fatalities."
"Most Ontario businesses will face increased risks due to climate change."
"Climate risks are highest among Ontario's most vulnerable populations and will continue to amplify existing disparities and inequities."
...they project how an expected rise in the number of days with extreme heat – 30 degrees and up – will have impacts on Ontario's growing seasons, businesses and human health.
By the 2080s, the report forecasts that southern, central and eastern Ontario will average 55 to 60 such extreme heat days per year, a nearly fourfold increase from the current annual average of about 16 days.
Northern Ontario, which experiences an average of 4 extreme heat days annually, is projected to see upwards of 35 such days each year.
One sees the reason for obscuring this report for so long when looking at its recommendations.
"Changes in Ontario's climate are expected to continue at unprecedented rates," says the report. "It is important to recognize how these findings can be used to spur action to protect residents, ecosystems, businesses and communities across Ontario."
The report lays out the ways the researchers expect climate change to affect each region of Ontario along five broad themes: infrastructure; food and agriculture; people and communities; natural resources, ecosystems and the environment; business and the economy.
The president of the Climate Risk Institute, Al Douglas,
says Ontario's food production and agriculture are particularly vulnerable to climate change.
"Yields will decrease," he said. "It will affect the overall health of livestock. It will pose indirect threats to things like water availability, water quality. It'll indirectly impact soil health and soil quality."
The future is perilous; food scarcity will be common, as will be flooding, both of which demand protection of sensitive lands. Only the most benighted and the most venal will fail to understand the gravity of what we face. I suspect both adjectives apply to the Ford bandits.
UPDATE: A new online poll finds that people are very unhappy with the Ford government:
... seven-in-ten (69%) Ontarians are angry or annoyed about Doug Ford’s plan to rezone parts of the greenbelt for housing, up 8 points from December 2022. Only 17% of PC voters are pleased or happy about the plan.