The Niagara Falls Review

Trudeau set to unveil federal carbon plan

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — The federal government will take some of the sting out of its upcoming carbon tax Tuesday with a promise to give rebates directly to Canadians.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will be in Toronto with Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna where they will begin making a hard sell of their carbon pricing plan ahead of the next federal election.

That sell includes offsetting the hit to a family’s pocketbook with carbon price rebates that are expected to be based on income and the size of your family, loosely based on the scheme Alberta introduced when it implemente­d a carbon levy in 2017.

They will also announce Tuesday which provinces will see the federal carbon price will be applied. Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale and Internatio­nal Trade Minister Jim Carr, are being dispatched to their home provinces to outline how the rebate system will work in each province where it is in effect.

Announceme­nts are expected in Saskatchew­an, Manitoba, and New Brunswick.

British Columbia, Alberta and Quebec all clearly meet the federal threshold of having a price on carbon of at least $20 a tonne as of Jan. 1. Prince Edward Island will have a portion of the federal backstop imposed to bring its existing plan up to snuff. Nova Scotia’s cap-and-trade system announced last year, and Newfoundla­nd’s still secret climate plan, will be sufficient for Ottawa’s requiremen­ts in year one.

The amount raised by a national price on carbon will be substantia­l. Alberta expects to raise $1.4 billion from its levy this year, which is set at $30 a tonne.

Trudeau has promised any revenues raised by a carbon tax will be returned entirely to the people of the province where they are collected.

Insiders say the amount you qualify for as a rebate will be determined using tax filings, and that the money will flow next year, in plenty of time for Canadians to feel their impact before the 2019 election.

Carbon pricing is expected to be a key campaign issue, with the federal Conservati­ves pushing heavily against a carbon tax and insisting they would eliminate it entirely if they form government.

Ottawa has struggled not only with exactly how much to give but also what to do about the fact that the amount of revenue collected from the carbon price will vary by province, largely due to difference­s in the way people generate electricit­y. For example, Saskatchew­an and New Brunswick, where most electricit­y still comes from coal, will pay more in carbon levies than Manitoba or Ontario, where most electricit­y comes from renewable sources.

Ottawa’s price will start at $20 a tonne on Jan. 1, and rise $10 a year until it hits $50 in 2022. At that point, Ottawa has committed to review the price.

Jennifer Winter, director of energy and environmen­tal policy at the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary, estimated last year that at $20 a tonne, the annual cost to households would be $413 in Saskatchew­an, $386 in New Brunswick,

$283 in Ontario and $273 in Manitoba.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will be in Toronto with Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna to present their carbon pricing plan.
CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will be in Toronto with Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna to present their carbon pricing plan.

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