The Province

Conservati­ve premiers are lying about carbon pricing: Trudeau

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OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says conservati­ve politician­s across Canada, including premiers, are lying to Canadians about the carbon price.

Trudeau's government is buckling as attacks mount against carbon pricing and voters increasing­ly side with politician­s who say the policy is making their lives less affordable.

Most premiers and federal Conservati­ves are pushing the Liberals to at least cancel a scheduled increase of the carbon price April 1.

Trudeau says those politician­s are failing to acknowledg­e and inform Canadians about carbon-price rebates meant to offset consumers' costs.

He is accusing Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre of blocking legislatio­n that would double the rebate top-up for rural Canadians.

His comments at a press conference in Vancouver come as several premiers are bringing their anti-carbon price pleas to a House of Commons committee this week.

Saskatchew­an Premier Scott Moe told the House of Commons operations committee earlier Wednesday that he believes in climate change and that emissions need to go down.

But Moe said pricing pollution is not the way to do it.

“The goal is not for the big polluters to pay, the goal is for them to emit less,” he said, bristling a little during an exchange with NDP MP Alexandre Boulerice.

“How is it we shouldn't make big polluters pay?” Boulerice demanded, accusing Moe of believing that “giant vacuum cleaners” will suck emissions out of the sky to solve climate change.

The antagonist­ic nature of the debate was on full display at the committee, which spent almost as much time arguing about whether Moe should have been there at all as it did hearing what he had to say.

Liberal, NDP and Bloc Quebecois MPs accused the Conservati­ves, who chair the committee, of circumvent­ing other members and inviting Moe to speak without any consultati­on.

MPs from the three parties, which all endorse carbon pricing, pushed Moe to explain what he would do to cut emissions.

Trudeau wrote a letter to premiers Tuesday suggesting that if they dislike the federal carbon pricing policy so much, they are welcome to produce their own systems to achieve the same results.

Moe said Saskatchew­an's industry and farmers have lowered their emissions and are displacing products overseas that have a higher carbon footprint.

“We are not climate laggards,” Moe said.

He insisted the carbon price makes it harder for families and businesses to lower their emissions.

Ontario Liberal MP Francis Drouin challenged Moe on why he hasn't cut taxes he is in control of if he is so concerned about the cost of living.

Saskatchew­an already exempts natural gas used for heat from the provincial sales tax.

In January, Moe also stopped the province's collection of the carbon price on natural gas used for heat, in retaliatio­n for the federal decision to temporaril­y exempt heating oil from the policy.

About 80 per cent of Saskatchew­an households use natural gas for heat, compared with just three per cent that use heating oil.

Liberal MP Charles Sousa pushed Moe a little on that decision, asking him if he expects Saskatchew­an residents to uphold the law.

Moe said he does, but he also said the decision on carbon pricing and natural gas was made because Ottawa is being unfair.

The Liberals announced the heating oil exemption last fall and they promote it as a fair plan because heating oil already costs three to four times what natural gas does. But other premiers and Conservati­ves said it was to shore up votes in Atlantic Canada.

 ?? HEYWOOD YU/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Saskatchew­an Premier Scott Moe told the House of Commons operations committee Wednesday that he believes in climate change and the need to reduce emissions but that pricing pollution is the wrong way to do it.
HEYWOOD YU/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Saskatchew­an Premier Scott Moe told the House of Commons operations committee Wednesday that he believes in climate change and the need to reduce emissions but that pricing pollution is the wrong way to do it.

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