Chatelaine_April_May_2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
Last november, the Montreal-
based environmental non-profi t
Environnement Jeunesse (ENJEU)
sued the federal government for
failing to do enough for climate
change. Their legal argument
was devastatingly simple: By not
reducing carbon emissions enough
to avoid dangerous climate change,
the government was violating the
charter rights of Quebeckers, who
are guaranteed the right to live in
a “healthful environment.” Catherine
Gauthier, ENJEU’s executive director,
initiated the class action lawsuit
on behalf of nearly 3.5 million
Quebeckers who are age 35 or
younger—each one seeking $100
in damages. It was the fi rst such
litigation in Canada, but it was
certainly not the fi rst time Gauthier

has taken on such a formidable
challenge. At an age when other kids
are learning to drive, Gauthier was
mastering the eco-activist ropes:
In short order, at 16, she went from
launching a composting program at
her high school in Mont-Saint-Hilaire
to addressing 10,000 delegates at
the UN Climate Change Conference
in Montreal as a youth representative
of the Canadian delegation. ENJEU
selected her for the role, and she
has been with the organization
ever since. The non-profi t is all
about educating and empowering
youth around environmental issues,
but Gauthier’s work doesn’t stop
there—since 2014, she has also
been a lecturer at the Université de
Sherbrooke, teaching courses on
climate change negotiations and

eco-politics. While the lawsuit likely
won’t be resolved for a few years,
she is optimistic: A comparable suit
in the Netherlands forced the Dutch
government to cut its emissions
levels by at least 25 percent by


  1. ENJEU hopes for a similar
    outcome, holding the government
    fi nancially accountable for the past
    25 years of inaction and making it
    legally responsible for future climate
    measures. Gauthier describes her
    own attitude toward climate change
    as a bit of a “roller coaster”—
    inspired one day, pessimistic the
    next—but she is confi dent that
    the lawsuit provides young people
    with a certain hope. “It’s given us
    more ammunition,” she says, “and
    it shows that young people really
    want to tackle climate change.”


Thawing
permafrost will
destabilize
infrastructure

Areas of permafrost,
which have been frozen
for 10,000 years, are
now thawing, causing
havoc for infrastruc-
ture, as buildings slip
off their foundations
and ice roads
disappear. Waterways
are fi lling with sediment
and record levels of
toxic mercury. And
as the ground thaws,
everything buried
under the ice
decomposes, releasing
methane. Communities
like Tuktoyaktuk
are looking for
federal funds as the
situation worsens.

An ice-free
Arctic will invite
oil drilling—and
security concerns

The Northwest
Passage used to
be famously full of
treacherous ice. By
2040, Arctic summers
are expected to be
completely ice-free,
allowing for smooth
sailing. A longer
shipping season could
spell relief for the
North’s food security
woes and expand
cruise ship tourism.
However, more ships
navigating Arctic
waters could also
bring disruption of
ecosystems, threats
to Inuit culture and
security challenges to
this oil-rich but largely
unprotected region.

78 CHATELAINE • APRIL/MAY 2019


The millennial suing the


federal government for


environmental negligence


Catherine
Gauthier,
29

life REAL LIFE


THE FRENCH RIVER and its surrounding water-
shed cover 6,600 square kilometres of pristine
wilderness between Nipissing and Georgian Bay,
Ont. It’s home to migratory birds and boreal car-
ibou. And for the Moose Cree First Nation, it’s
the last source of clean drinking water, teeming
with whitefi sh, pickerel and pike. Moose Cree
Chief Patricia Faries grew up on the land, walk-
ing to school through fi ve feet of snow in moose
hides and moccasins. In 1998, when she returned
after completing a law degree in Toronto, she
noticed the snowfall had diminished. The water
levels had sunken, and new sandbars were start-
ing to appear. The animals were moving off the
watershed in search of more food, and many
Moose Cree people were following them. Since
Faries was elected chief in 2016, she has been on
a dogged mission to protect the French River

from companies like NioBay Metals, which wants
drilling permits to extract minerals from the
land, as the area is an especially rich source of
niobium, a mineral used for making steel and
superalloys. The provincial government pro-
tected some 1,600 square kilometres of the
French River watershed and its lands as part
of the Ontario Living Legacy Initiative, a conser-
vation strategy implemented in 1999. Faries
is pressuring them to add the rest. She has
requested more support and cooperation from
the Ontario government, insisting that pro-
tecting these lands could help Canada catch up
to its climate and biodiversity targets.
Her eff orts have been lauded by such environ-
mental A-listers as the Wildlands League and
the Environmental Commissioner of Ontario.
“We don’t have enough housing,” says Faries.
“Our kids can’t go to school. We have boil-water
warnings. Yet, everyone else is benefi ting from
the resources of our land. We’ve been patient.”
Faries practises the Seventh Generation
Principle: the idea that you should work to cre-
ate a better world not just for your children but
for your descendants seven generations down
the road. She has a three-year-old granddaugh-
ter named Anastasia, and she wants Anastasia’s
great-grandchildren to know what Faries did for
them. “This is the only place on earth we have to
live,” she says, “and they have to protect it
because we did for them.”

The First Nations


Chief protecting our


watersheds


Patricia Faries,
53

GAUTHIER PHOTO, JULIE DUROCHER.
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