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Feedback session discusses how P.E.I. should adapt to climate change

Adam Fenec, left, director of UPEI’’s Climate Lab, speaks during a public feedback session in Summrside this week regarding the adaptation section of the province’s new Climate Action Plan.
Adam Fenec, left, director of UPEI’’s Climate Lab, speaks during a public feedback session in Summrside this week regarding the adaptation section of the province’s new Climate Action Plan.

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 Barry Murray gets a worried look on his face when the conversation turns towards climate change.

“We haven’t got a clue,” said the Kensington resident.

“We haven’t really absorbed how serious the impacts of climate change are going to be and we’re kind of unprepared yet.”

Murray, who is the executive director of the Kensington North Watershed Association, was the only member of the public to attend a meeting Wednesday evening in Summerside to provide input into how P.E.I. can adapt to climate change, as part of the province’s new Climate Change Action Plan.

The adaptation strategy is being developed by UPEI’’s Climate Lab. It’s director, Adam Fenec, said Tuesday that they have been receiving a lot of good feedback and he expects to present the final plan to the province by the end of October.

During Wednesday’s event, Fenec led a general discussion about climate change as it relates to P.E.I. and took questions from the handful of people who attended, including Murray.

Fenec touched on a wide-range of topics as part of the discussion, including a topic near to the hearts and pocket books of many Islanders – agriculture.

The relevant available data now suggests P.E.I. can expect have an additional growing month for crops by between 2041 and 2070.

However, those same growing seasons will also be much drier overall with more severe storms.

These are all things P.E.I. as a whole needs to start preparing for, said Fenec.

Long-term thinking and planning is critical to the province’s future, he added.

“If you plant a tree now you’re planting for 70 years from now. But the climate is going to be different. So there are certain species that won’t do well under climate change and they’re probably going to disappear from the Island. If we plant them (now) they’re just going to go.”

More information about P.E.I.’s Climate Change Action Plan is available online at www.princeedwardisland.ca/adaptation.

[email protected]

@JournalPMacLean

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