The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Battle lines drawn over whether carbon tax will increase after 2022

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OTTAWA — As the fall election campaign fast approaches, the Liberals and Conservati­ves went to battle on Monday over whether the carbon tax will keep rising after 2022 — a fight prompted by confusing language from Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna over the past few months.

The current plan sees a gradual increase from $20 per tonne of greenhouse-gas emissions in 2019 to $50 per tonne in 2022. The tax — which is only implemente­d in provinces without an equivalent carbon pricing plan — comes with a rebate that the government says will more than offset the cost for most families.

The Parliament­ary Budget Officer has previously estimated the carbon tax would need to rise to $102 per tonne by 2030 to meet the government’s emissions reduction target, unless other measures are used.

In a news conference Monday morning, McKenna used careful phrasing to say that the current plan has no “intention” of going past $50 per tonne since it ends in 2022, but then added that decisions about future price increases will be made after discussing it with provincial government­s.

“In 2016, we negotiated for a year with provinces and territorie­s that included a price on pollution until 2022,” she said. “So there’s no intention to go up beyond that, any decision would be made in discussion­s with provinces and territorie­s and stakeholde­rs.”

She was asked specifical­ly if she’s ruling out price increases beyond 2022, but didn’t respond directly. “All we’ve done is we’ve negotiated until 2022, so I’m not in a position to negotiate anything past that,” she said. “I think that there’ll be an election in 2023 and I think that might be a discussion for that election.”

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