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More reporting needed to show progress on Ontario municipal climate and sustainability plans, says study
While sustainability reporting is a widespread practice in the private sector, new research shows that the same cannot be said for Ontario municipalities.
Researchers at the University of Waterloo studied 38 municipalities in Ontario, representing more than two-thirds of the population, and discovered that almost all municipalities publish their sustainability and climate change goals, but under half are formally reporting on their progress.
Municipalities are a key part of the equation for Canada to achieve its ambitious climate action targets, but the significant gap between planning and reporting makes it difficult for the public and stakeholders to stay up to date with performance, whether good or bad.
"Citizens can go online and see the financial performance of a municipality," said Leah Feor, Ph.D. candidate in the School of Environment, Enterprise and Development. "But they would have to dig around to see how the operations and policies of the municipality are contributing to sustainable development and climate action. It's not always easy to find."
The researchers found that sustainability information is most commonly reported through annual reports, while separate sustainability reports are scarce and appear to be decreasing over time. The study further showed that provincial regulation does not guarantee that municipalities will publish Energy Conservation and Demand Management plans and reporting documents on their public websites.
"A regulation isn't a silver bullet for ensuring municipalities adopt planning and reporting practices," said Feor. "If we want to see province-wide adoption, then we will need to see more guidance, capacity building, and potentially funding from the top. Otherwise, it will be driven bottom-up, and some municipalities will excel, and others will lag."
More information:
Leah Feor et al, Municipal Sustainability and Climate Planning: A Study of 38 Canadian Local Governments' Plans and Reports, Environments (2023). DOI: 10.3390/environments10120203
Citation:
More reporting needed to show progress on Ontario municipal climate and sustainability plans, says study (2024, January 25)
retrieved 25 January 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-01-ontario-municipal-climate-sustainability.html
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