OTTAWA, June 1, 2017 /CNW/ - Pollution costs Canadians tens of billions of dollars every year in terms of impacts on their health and well-being, their pocketbooks and the value of their homes, buildings, roads and the natural environment.
This is according to a new report released today by the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) entitled The Costs of Pollution in Canada: Measuring the impacts on families, businesses and governments. The report offers the most comprehensive portrait of pollution and its costs ever undertaken in Canada.
Based on a systematic review of published Canadian and international studies, the report reveals that:
"This report demonstrates that the costs of pollution amount to tens of billions of dollars a year. These costs are real and will be borne by Canadian families, businesses and governments into the future unless we take action to minimize pollution," said Scott Vaughan, president-CEO, IISD. "Having strong data to demonstrate the costs is key to reducing them. The impacts of pollution are too great to allow poor data to stop us from taking action," he added.
"Our report reviewed the costs of all pollutants in Canada using a transparent method. Since costs vary, we wanted to examine everything we could," said report author Robert Smith. "It is the most complete look to-date at the costs of pollutants in Canada. The seriousness of our findings underscores the need for more research to fill the gaps in our understanding of pollution costs," added Smith.
The development of the report also identified several priority data gaps: climate change; persistent organic pollutants; heavy metals and freshwater pollution from phosphorus and nitrogen.
The Costs of Pollution in Canada: Measuring the impacts on families, businesses and governments Report videos include:
Contaminated sites
Extreme Weather
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
Smog
ABOUT THE INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (IISD)
SOURCE International Institute for Sustainable Development
or to speak with one of our experts about the report's findings, please contact: Janet Weichel McKenzie (OTTAWA), [email protected], (613) 808-4642 cell; Sumeep Bath, (WINNIPEG/INTERNATIONAL), Media and Communications Officer, [email protected], (204) 958 7700 ext. 740
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