Environmental Bill of Rights

The Environmental Bill of Rights (EBR) was passed by the legislature of Ontario, Canada in 1993. It gives Ontario citizens rights to participate in environmental decision-making. The EBR is upheld by the Environmental Commissioner of Ontario, who is currently Gord Miller.[1]

The EBR gives citizens the right, under specific circumstances:[2]

The EBR also lays out responsibilities for those ministries that are prescribed:[3]

The Environmental Commissioner of Ontario reports annually on ministries' compliance with the EBR.

Energy Conservation

Since 2009, the EBR requires the ECO to report annually "on the progress of activities in Ontario to reduce the use or make more efficient use of electricity, natural gas, propane, oil and transportation fuels."[5] The ECO produces two-part annual reports on energy conservation, the first part on the broader policy framework affecting energy conservation in Ontario, and the second part on the results of initiatives that are underway.[6]

Climate Change

Since 2009, the EBR requires the ECO to report annually on the progress of activities in Ontario to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.[7] The ECO produces annual Greenhouse Gas Progress Reports.[8]

References

External links

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