Lethbridge Herald

CARBON TAX CHANGES

FEDS MULL FURTHER CHANGES TO CARBON TAX PLAN

- Mia Rabson and Andy Blatchford THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Ottawa looks to address competitiv­eness fears in corporate Canada

The federal carbon pricing system for heavy emitters, softened last week to ease the impact on Canadian industry, could be amended even further this fall as Ottawa looks to address competitiv­eness fears in corporate Canada fuelled by U.S. tax cuts, tariffs and environmen­tal policy roll backs.

Environmen­t Canada also now has to consult on the proposed plan with more than a dozen industrial sectors specific to Ontario that weren’t originally expected to be affected by the federal carbon pricing program because Ontario had its own system — now scrapped by Doug Ford’s new provincial government.

That includes the auto sector, which is the next possible target for President Donald Trump’s tariffs, and breweries, who are paying more for their cans from the aluminum tariffs Trump has already imposed.

Steel, which also had tariffs imposed by the U.S. in June, was one of the industries given the biggest break by Ottawa last week when Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna increased the amount of emissions companies can produce before they have to start paying the carbon price. Those changes came after six months of consultati­ons with affected industries who warned the government the proposed system was too onerous and could compel some of them to consider leaving Canada altogether.

Manufactur­ers of steel, iron, lime, cement and nitrogen fertilizer will now have to pay the carbon price only on emissions that exceed 90 per cent of the average emissions in their sector. Other companies that produce more than 50,000 tonnes of greenhouse gases a year, will pay the carbon price on anything over 80 per cent.

The original proposal McKenna made in January was to set that cap at 70 per cent for all industry.

John Moffet, the associate assistant deputy minister at Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada, said Thursday those changes may not be the last, and that economic pressures facing companies from things like U.S. tariffs are among the factors being looked at.

“I would say the government is open to further changes across the board,” said Moffet.

Environmen­t Canada officials met with representa­tives from more than a dozen Ontario industries, including auto and auto parts manufactur­ers, pharmaceut­ical companies and a number of chemical firms, last week to begin the process of assessing how their competitiv­eness might be affected by the carbon price. The federal system will only be applicable in provinces without a federally approved carbon price system of their own.

Although Ottawa won’t be assessing which provinces have such plans until September, Moffet said when the original consultati­ons took place, the federal government analysed and consulted industries only in provinces that were expected to use the federal pricing program.

The changes to the system have become political fodder for carbon price opponents — particular­ly the federal Conservati­ves and their provincial counterpar­ts in Ontario, Saskatchew­an and Alberta — who argue that scaling back the program to reduce the impact on business is an admission the carbon pricing system is bad for the economy. They want Ottawa to scrap the entire carbon pricing plan.

The government says the plan all along was to set an initial target and then amend it after more specific review, and that the changes made will not have a material impact on the amount of greenhouse gases that will be cut from Canada’s total annual emissions. Moffet said the incentives to reduce emissions remain, even with a higher cap.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada