Lethbridge Herald

Manitoba studying lower carbon tax

PREMIER OPPOSED TO FEDERAL DEMAND

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — WINNIPEG

The Manitoba government has been eyeing the possibilit­y of charging a carbon tax of $25 per tonne — half of what the federal government has insisted must be in place by 2022 — according to a document obtained by The Canadian Press.

The document, titled the Climate and Green Plan Town Hall Toolkit, also says farmers would be exempt from the tax, and at $25 per tonne, it would raise $250 million annually.

Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Minister Rochelle Squires said the toolkit is only a draft document, and no final decision has been made on what the carbon tax will end up being.

“The document in question is an internal draft document that I will not comment on,” Squires said in a written statement.

“It is not government policy. We are continuing our work in developing a made-in-Manitoba Climate and Green Plan by consulting with Manitobans including the business community and environmen­tal and community stakeholde­rs, as well as the federal government.”

Premier Brian Pallister has already signalled Manitoba is opposed to the federal demand. Ottawa wants the provinces to start with a $10 per tonne tax next year that would ramp up to $50 a tonne by 2022.

Once it’s fully phased in, the tax would add about $5.82 to the cost of a 50-litre tank of gasoline. The natural gas heating bill for the average single, detached home would rise by about $264 a year.

Pallister has said Manitobans cannot afford the higher rate and the province deserves credit for spending billions of dollars on its clean hydroelect­ric grid.

He is also seeking a legal opinion on whether the federal government has the constituti­onal authority to order the provinces to either adopt a carbon tax, set up a cap-and-trade system or accept a federal levy of $50 per tonne with the revenue handed over to the province.

The Saskatchew­an government is also fighting Ottawa’s plan, and opposing any price on carbon.

Federal Environmen­t and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna said in May the federal government has the authority because environmen­tal protection falls under its jurisdicti­on.

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