National Post

Carbon tax will push flyers to U.S.: Canadian airlines

Carriers urge exemption from Ottawa

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Canadian airlines are urging Ottawa to exempt them from the Jan. 1 imposition of a federal carbon tax, which they warn will boost airfares and push passengers across the border to rival carriers and airports.

The National Airlines Council of Canada sent a letter to three federal ministers Friday cautioning the government about the reduction the levy would cause to revenues as well as marginal domestic routes.

“A carbon tax is probably the worst tool that you can envisage for aviation if you want to reduce emissions,” lobby group president Massimo Bergamini said in an interview.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has committed to imposing a carbon tax on provinces that lack their own form of pricing for greenhouse gas emissions. As it stands, airlines will be required to pay the levy on flights within provinces that fall under the federal system. Meanwhile the government plans to work with jurisdicti­ons to adopt a pricing scheme for interprovi­ncial flights.

The government­s of Saskatchew­an and Ontario are each challengin­g the federal carbon tax in court.

All current provincial pricing plans — such as British Columbia’s and Quebec’s — exempt airlines from a carbon tax.

But the impending federal tax in provinces that don’t put a price on emissions, such as Manitoba and Ontario — where Premier Doug Ford recently scrapped cap-and-trade — are slated to face Ottawa’s levy come Jan. 1.

That tax starts off at $20 a tonne in 2019 and rises to $50 in 2022. A higher Ontario aviation fuel tax would combine with the carbon tax to drive up the cost of a flight by as much as $45 for a family of four by 2022, the airline council said, citing a study it commission­ed.

Bergamini said any notions about a carbon tax driving fuel-efficient innovation were “misplaced,” with airlines already investing heavily to reduce consumptio­n of fuel — often their biggest expense — through lightweigh­t materials and cargo volume.

“We’ve squeezed about as much blood as we can from that stone,” he said.

Higher airfares could push more Canadians to U.S. airlines and airports, particular­ly those near the border in New York state and Washington state, Bergamini said.

Carriers may have to cut the number of flights on marginal routes in Canada, he added. “This is particular­ly true in the North and in smaller communitie­s.”

The airline council is advocating a federal system along the lines of cap-andtrade where carriers could buy credits from other industries that achieve greater emissions reduction.

PROBABLY THE WORST TOOL THAT YOU CAN ENVISAGE FOR AVIATION.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Canadian airlines are urging Ottawa to delay the Jan. 1 start date of the carbon tax, which they warn will boost airfares and push passengers to airports across the border.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Canadian airlines are urging Ottawa to delay the Jan. 1 start date of the carbon tax, which they warn will boost airfares and push passengers to airports across the border.

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