The Daily Courier

Federal carbon tax rebates will exceed the cost for most people affected

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OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged more than $2 billion in annual carbon tax rebates as his Liberal government tried to persuade Canadians that putting a price on pollution is the best way to halt climate change.

Trudeau’s plan to slash Canada’s emissions was scoffed at by critics on both sides of the carbon tax argument. Groups that favour carbon prices argued Canada’s proposed cuts were nowhere near big enough while opponents accusing the government from buying votes to outright lying about whether the rebates will really offset the increased cost to families.

Trudeau said there is both a “moral and economic imperative to act” to manage climate change so the next generation­s of Canadians aren’t left in a world where monster storms and massive droughts burn up or flood out major portions of the planet.

“Will we kick this can down the road yet again to be dealt with in another place or at another time, or will we show some courage and do what needs to be done for this generation and the next?” he said, addressing students at Humber College in Toronto.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt set the stage for what will be a key issue in next year’s federal election. Trudeau promised a national price on carbon in the 2015 campaign. In 2016, he told provinces if they didn’t introduce their own price on carbon, Ottawa would do it for them.

In 2017, he gave them almost a year to come up with a plan of their own that met federal standards. Four provinces did not, and so on April 1, Saskatchew­an, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick residents will start paying a $20 per tonne carbon tax on fossil fuels.

It will add around $2 to a tank of gas, or $8 to a monthly natural gas bill. The prices of many consumer goods and services will also go up to reflect the carbon tax that businesses pay. Ottawa estimates people in those provinces will pay between $202 and $403 more, on average, because of the carbon tax in 2019-20.

To minimize the impact of those costs, residents in those provinces will get carbon price rebates when they file their income taxes that range from an average $248 in New Brunswick, to $598 in Saskatchew­an.

The amount paid depends on the amount and types of energy consumed. Payments will be determined based on family size. People who live outside big cities will get 10 per cent more to account for a higher reliance on fossil fuels and lack of access to things like public transit.

Officials said more than 70 per cent of households will end up receiving more than they pay.

The government expects to collect more than $2.36 billion from the four affected provinces in 2019-20, and says 90 per cent of the revenues collected will be returned to individual­s via the rebates. The rest will be parceled out to small businesses, colleges, schools and hospitals in a special fund that has yet to be worked out.

Trudeau says every penny will be rebated in some way and the program will be audited and publicly reported on each year. He said people can save even more by finding ways to reduce their energy use, and subsequent­ly, their emissions.

Not everyone believes him, and the next election is shaping up to be a battle royale over the carbon price.

Conservati­ve Party Leader Andrew Scheer, who has promised the carbon tax will be scrapped if he becomes prime minister, said Tuesday it is a lie that most people will get a rebate larger than their carbon tax bill.

“At the end of the day, Canadians know that a measly $12.50 a month will not cover the true cost of this carbon tax,” he said. “Life is going to get a lot more expensive for hardworkin­g Canadian families and large industrial polluters are getting off scot free.”

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