Lethbridge Herald

Sask. seeks ruling on carbon tax

Saskatchew­an asking province’s Appeal Court to rule on federal plan

- Ryan McKenna

The Saskatchew­an government is asking the province’s Appeal Court to rule on whether Ottawa can impose a carbon tax but the federal government says it is confident it will prevail. Saskatchew­an wants to know whether Ottawa’s plan to bring in a carbon price for provinces that don’t have one violates the Constituti­on.

Premier Scott Moe’s government has consistent­ly fought against the carbon tax, arguing the province’s own climate-change plans are sufficient to reduce emissions.

“Our constituti­onal challenge asserts that the provincial government, not the federal government, has the constituti­onal authority to set our policy in this area,” Moe said at a news conference announcing the challenge Wednesday.

“Provinces are not subsidiari­es of the federal government and in Saskatchew­an we have a plan. Our plan reduces emissions without a carbon tax.”

The province said it wants a ruling by the end of the year and is prepared to go to the Supreme Court if needed.

The federal climate plan calls for the taxing of greenhouse gas emissions starting at $10 per tonne this year, rising $10 a year to $50 a tonne in 2022. It leaves it to the provinces to decide how to do that either through a tax or a cap-and-trade system.

Saskatchew­an is the lone holdout. Its climate plan includes performanc­e standards for large emitters, better building codes and a freight delivery strategy, but not a broad-based price on carbon.

Federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna said in Ottawa that her government is confident it has the legal authority.

“We are disappoint­ed to see this news because we’re all in this together,” McKenna said. “We want to have a price on pollution across the country and every province has an opportunit­y to design a system that makes sense for them.”

“There are still people out there who think there’s a choice to be made between what’s good for the environmen­t and what’s good for the economy,” added Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

But Saskatchew­an Justice Minister Don Morgan said his government’s constituti­onal lawyers believe Ottawa’s plan can be successful­ly challenged because it imposes a tax at different rates depending on how each province responds to the federal demands.

“We recognize the federal government’s right to levy a tax,” Morgan said. “If there was a total uniform rate, such as GST, it would be a different argument, but that is not the way this is structured.”

However, University of Ottawa law professor Nathalie Chalifour feels that the courts will rule the constituti­onality of the measure valid.

The province’s decision to challenge the carbon tax was met with praise from both the Saskatchew­an Associatio­n of Rural Municipali­ties and the Agricultur­al Producers Associatio­n of Saskatchew­an.

“It would be disastrous to agricultur­e especially now when we’re facing such high fuel prices as it is,” said SARM president Ray Orb. “And we certainly wouldn’t be able to tolerate any kind of a tax on top of that.”

Saskatchew­an also won an ally in the Opposition United Conservati­ve Party next door in Alberta. Leader Jason Kenney tweeted that his party would seek intervener status and support Saskatchew­an.

But Amir Attaran, a law professor at the Ecojustice Environmen­t Law Clinic at the University of Ottawa, said Saskatchew­an will not win.

“It’s doomed,” he said. “They may win at the Saskatchew­an Court of Appeal, but if they go up to the Supreme Court of Canada, I have very little belief that they will win.”

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