fbpx Scientists protest in Canada | Page 14 | Science in the net

Scientists protest in Canada

Primary tabs

Read time: 2 mins

Death of evidence” rally in Ottawa, Canada.

A mock funeral march took place on July 10 in Ottawa, Canada, where hundreds of scientists from universities and labs gathered to mourn the “death of evidence”, the government’s cuts to research. Dressed in white coats, they protested against what the rally’s organizers consider a federal war on science. Researchers expressed a strong concern against the budget cuts to environmental research.

The omnibus budget bill, that was approved on June 15 after a 24h marathon voting session, includes a modification of regulations about environmental protection. The bill withdraws, among others, the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act. The federal cabinet will be allowed to approve industrial projects that have a significant impact the environment. Several research institutions will suffer the consequences of the budget cut. The Experimental Lakes Area (ELA) will close in March 2013 according to the new bill. The ELA has been involved in important research projects about acid rain and climate change for the last 40 years.

Stephen Harper government included into the budget bill a reform of the Fisheries Act. The Fisheries Act currently protects any body of water with fish in them, regardless of size. After the changes included in the bill, the environmental assessments will only affect large bodies of water, leaving small streams unprotected. The Polar Environment Atmospheric Research Laboratory (PEARL) will be another victim of the federal cuts to the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences.

by VALENTINA DAELLI - Science Communication, Neuroscience 

Autori: 
Sezioni: 
Budget cuts

prossimo articolo

COP28: It's Up to the Oil Tycoon to Say Goodbye to Fossils

Source: UNFCCC.

It had to be an oil tycoon to say goodbye to fossils, like the smoker extinguishing his last cigarette and the alcoholic giving up the Negroni. And so it was: for the first time at a United Nations climate change Conference of the Parties, we declare in black and white our desire to abandon coal, gas, and oil. COP28 was held in Dubai, one of the countries most dependent on fossil fuels, and was coordinated by the extremely capable Sultan al-Jaber, president of the largest oil company, ADNOC.