Youth employment programs to build a more equitable and inclusive future for conservation (Target 22)

As communities, businesses, and industries increasingly integrate nature-based solutions to address global challenges like climate change and biodiversity loss, conservation experience is becoming crucial for youth entering the workforce. Historically, the conservation sector in Canada has lacked diversity, but that trend is changing. Indigenous people, racialized youth, youth with disabilities, and those facing employment barriers are finding opportunities in conservation careers. Investing in youth employment programs can yield local community and economic benefits, enhanced ecosystem wellbeing, career paths for youth, and improvements in mental and physical health, fostering inclusion and belonging.

The Green Budget Coalition is pleased with the proposed allocation of $351.2 million in 2025-26 for Canada Summer Jobs and the Youth Employment and Skills Strategy (YESS) program to support 90,000 youth jobs, as well as the government’s intention to launch consultations for a Youth Climate Corps program. However, the effectiveness of the YESS program is limited by specific requirements, such as restricting full-time terms to a maximum of three months and eligibility criteria preventing the extension of work terms.

The Green Budget Coalition recommends that the government continue and enhance support for conservation and other organizations by addressing these limitations.

Recommended Investments and Improvements [ESDC with PC and ECCC]:

  • For the Youth Employment and Skills Strategy and Canada Summer Jobs programs:
    • Amend the program funding rules to allow all work terms to be at least six months long, full-time, at geographically-appropriate wage levels;
    • Amend the program participant eligibility rules to permit the extension of currently funded positions to six months before requiring participants to transition to new roles;
    • $80 million in 2025-26 to enable 20% of work terms to be extended to 6-8 months, while maintaining the same number of hires; and
    • $500 million per year, ongoing, starting in 2026-2027, to create permanent funding allowing 25% of young people hired to be employed for roughly 6-8 months.
  • Collaborate with environmental NGOs and funding communities to increase match funding and expand the reach and benefits of these programs for youth employment in the environmental sector.

See also recommendations for the Youth Climate Corps in Sustainable jobs for workers and communities, earlier in this document.

Ecological connectivity: Nationwide fund and wildlife crossings pilot program

This recommendation complements and strengthens the earlier recommendation for Ecological connectivity: Renewal of Parks Canada’s Ecological Corridors program.

Ecological connectivity is fundamental to tackling the top threats to biodiversity: habitat loss and fragmentation, and climate change. Federal investment is needed for a nation-wide connectivity fund to support work by Crown and Indigenous governments, NGOs, and private entities to conserve areas identified as important for ecological connectivity and to create effective mitigation measures to improve connectivity of fragmented landscapes.

The Green Budget Coalition also recommends establishing a pilot federal wildlife crossings Program. Taking guidance from the successful US Wildlife Crossing Program model, the pilot program would fund provincial and federal wildlife crossings projects in critical regional wildlife linkage areas with high wildlife-vehicle collisions and would: protect biodiversity by maintaining wildlife-movement routes; address climate change as species’ ranges shift; move people and wildlife more safely across roads; increase the efficiency of transportation; stimulate local economies; and create jobs. The pilot could be delivered under Canada’s Natural Infrastructure Fund, if the Fund were expanded to include wildlife crossing structures.

Recommended Investment:

$500 million over five years for a nationwide connectivity fund, and a federal wildlife crossing pilot program [ECCC, PC, HICC]

Establish a new Habitat Infrastructure Renewal Fund

Canada was one of the first countries in the world to introduce national initiatives for nature conservation by government and non-profit organizations. This history of conservation has led to legacy conservation projects developed in partnership between government and non-profits. Many of these projects have involved conservation infrastructure. While the federal government has made significant investments in infrastructure renewal for Parks Canada and the Canadian Wildlife Service, only modest funding has been made available to non-profit conservation organizations which share the same history of intervention on the landscape to secure conservation gains. The Green Budget Coalition recommends the creation of a fund that would help not-for-profit conservancies who have made interventions on the landscape to advance ecological outcomes and protect natural spaces to reinvest in the conservation infrastructure that has made these gains for nature possible.

Recommended Investment:

$150 million over four years [ECCC, PC]

Accelerating restoration of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in the UN Decade of Ecosystem Restoration (2021-2030)

Total Recommended Investment:

$560 million over five years, coupled with directing up to $1.94 billion in existing funds to achieve restoration targets, goals, and commitments. [NRCan, ECCC, PC, DFO, AAFC]

This investment is to ensure that by 2030 at least 30% of areas of degraded terrestrial, inland water, coastal and marine ecosystems are under effective restoration to enhance biodiversity and ecosystem functions as agreed to in Target 2 of the Kunming- Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (KMGBF). Restoration of plant and animal communities benefits both people and biodiversity. Restored areas provide ecosystem services such as water purification, flood protection and resilience, recreational values, and climate change mitigation through the restoration of blue carbon ecosystems as well as the forests, grasslands and wetlands that sustain wildlife and sequester carbon.

Robust efforts and a highly ambitious plan are required to meet Target 2 of the KMGBF, commitments under the Freshwater Challenge, and the initial pledge of approximately 19 million hectares of terrestrial ecosystems in need of restoration under the Bonn Challenge.

Achieving Canada’s restoration goals will require:

  • A commitment of funds and the establishment of targets for the restoration of degraded lands, coastal areas, and freshwater habitats;
  • The support and mobilization of land and water stewards with jurisdiction and authority over degraded habitats (Indigenous Peoples, federal- land stewards, land stewards in other levels of government, private landowners);
  • Policies and programs ensuring benefit sharing with Indigenous Peoples in the restoration economy;
  • An increase in the number of trained restoration professionals working to identify and apply the restoration approaches necessary to achieve the targets for specific regions and habitats (e.g., on land: active and passive restoration, prescribed fire, revegetation, invasive species control); and
  • Establishing the regional demand for restoration materials (primarily seeds and trees) so that a regionally appropriate supply of materials can be built over time.

To that end, the Green Budget Coalition recommends that the federal government:

1. Establish a working group to coordinate restoration efforts across government

It is imperative to foster collaboration within the federal government and across other levels of government to establish targets, definitions, define baselines, and work toward the following goals:

  • Improving the integration of existing restoration programs to measure impact and maximize cross jurisdictional efforts and build a share network of best practice, data and knowledge sharing;
  • Supporting work to direct and expand existing funding, or establish new funds;
  • Create new, or reform existing, permitting processes and mechanisms to address overlapping jurisdiction to facilitate and expedite restoration;
  • Supporting Indigenous-led restoration and Indigenous participation in the restoration economy; and
  • Establish a common platform for tracking and reporting on progress.

$10 million over five years [PC, ECCC, NRCan]

2. Support a national seed supply for land- based restoration

For Canada to meet its international commitments to restore degraded areas, approximately 95 million kilograms of ecologically appropriate native grass and wildflower seed would be required. Current supply is insufficient. Canada does not currently have the native seed supply necessary to meet these committed targets. Other countries including the United States and Australia have recognized this and taken action.

To achieve Target 2, the Bonn Challenge goal, and ensure equitable inclusion of Indigenous people in the restoration economy, the following steps should be considered:

  • Build an inter-departmental federal leadership team to support the creation of a robust seed supply by:
    • Developing policies that favour use of local, native plants in restoration and reclamation (e.g., procurement policies) – which will generate consistent and predictable seed demand.
    • Supporting the development of a national native seed industry association to meet existing standards for bulk seed within the Seeds Act and enabling a seed source certification program.
    • Estimating native seed demand regionally across Canada – where demand exists, where priority areas for seed-based restoration exist, and what species are required.
    • Encouraging/incentivizing provincial, territorial, and municipal partners to adopt policies and practices (e.g., rights-of-way vegetation management) that favour use of local, native plants in restoration and reclamation.
  • Provide greater financial support to native seed producers for infrastructure, technology, and creation of an ecoregional seed tracking and labeling program, a code of ethics, and seed certification program.
  • Provide financial support to new and existing regional and provincial native seed partnerships and networks to allow them to pool native seed needs and build forward contracting systems with native seed growers.
  • Provide support for the agricultural sector to build native seed production on agricultural lands.
  • Increase seed storage capacity across Canada by leveraging existing infrastructure (e.g. AAFC research farms, NRCAN National Tree Seed Centre) and building new facilities.

$50 million over five years [NRCan, AAFC, ECCC]

3. Direct existing funds to contribute to Canada’s restoration goals

There are substantial programs and funding currently in place that can be leveraged to restore degraded habitat and achieve Target 2. The table below provides a partial list of applicable programs and estimates of the funding that could be directed to restoration.

$1.936 billion over six years [multiple departments, see table on page 65]

4. Expand the Aquatic Ecosystems Restoration Fund

Renew and expand the fund to include both coastal and inland aquatic ecosystems with the following recommendations for the design of the fund:

  • Allocate a portion of the fund to build and sustain regional habitat partnerships to increase collaboration and leverage regional capacity for ecosystem restoration;
  • Ensure restoration funding mechanisms
    cover the scale and timeframe necessary for identification of priority sites and assessment of restoration outcomes and benefits;
  • Support the development and implementation of regional habitat restoration plans;
  • Increase the capacity of Indigenous organizations, non-governmental organizations, and local stewardship groups to implement high-quality restoration projects;
  • Allocate a portion of the fund to establish a fish-passage program to restore access to habitat for priority species; and
  • Make enhanced carbon sequestration through the restoration of blue carbon ecosystems an objective of the fund.

$200 million over six years [DFO]

5. Establish the Terrestrial Ecosystems Restoration Fund

Invest in a new terrestrial ecosystem restoration fund managed by ECCC in collaboration with AAFC that focuses on restoring degraded lands. This fund would support restoration of wetlands, native grasslands, meadows, riparian areas, and native forests that are not covered by existing funding programs.

Restoration projects can begin in the first year as there are shovel ready projects across Canada. In parallel with initiating restoration of priority ecosystems, federal and provincial governments should work to define (building on existing international work), identify and map degraded areas such as marginally economically productive agricultural lands, rail/road/energy rights of ways, and altered riparian or coastal areas, as well as develop terrestrial restoration priorities with timelines and targets, incorporating existing federal program priorities such as the ECCC Priority Places for species at risk.

$300 million over six years [ECCC]

Marine spatial planning (MSP)

Halting and reversing the serious declines in ocean biodiversity and providing certainty among economic sectors dependent on the ocean, will require investments in the establishment of marine protected areas and the development of marine spatial plans.

It is no coincidence that the commitment to develop participatory, integrated and biodiversity inclusive spatial plans is the focus of the first target of the Global Biodiversity framework. MSP can provide foundational support to meeting the GBFs other targets in the marine environment, both with regards to halting and reversing biodiversity loss and ensuring the equitable sharing of the benefits and services that healthy ecosystems provide.

For MSP to be successful requires the investment of adequate funding, as well as setting objectives that are aligned with the goals of the GBF to provide decision makers with clear guidance on setting priorities and making trade-offs. Alignment of MSP with the GBF means that the development of conservation area networks must be the first priority in any spatial planning initiatives, as a healthy ocean is the very foundation of a thriving blue economy.

Marine spatial planning is an inclusive, comprehensive, and strategic approach to the use and management of ocean space and marine resources while protecting ecosystems, ensuring sustainability, and reducing overlap and conflicts between uses. MSP optimizes societal benefits from human activities while at the same time providing long-term protection of nature. MSP is a process that is being used by countries around the world.

MSP requires new governance arrangements that bring together various levels of government, including Indigenous governments, and the variety of stakeholders with an interest in the ocean region. The success of MSP hinges on a participatory approach and comprehensive governance. New governance arrangements, particularly with Indigenous peoples, is a critical component of successful MSP, and will require capacity support and ongoing funding. Building relationships and ensuring effective Indigenous and stakeholder engagement requires funding certainty that cannot be met with short term budget commitments.

The Government of Canada is currently proceeding with MSP in five regions, including: Southern BC; Newfoundland and Labrador Shelves; Estuary and Gulf of Saint Lawrence; Scotian Shelf and Bay of Fundy; and the Pacific North Coast. First generation plans or frameworks for the five regions are to be completed in 2024, but ongoing funding is required to continue collaborative processes, and support implementation and consultation in the development of full marine spatial plans, and to begin MSP in Canada’s remaining eight regions.

The original investment for MSP was made in 2018 with a one-year extension in 2023.

Recommended Investment:

$75 million over five years, then $15 million per year, ongoing [DFO, ECCC, PC, NRCan, TC]