The Standard (St. Catharines)

Carbon tax must rise to meet targets, PBO says

Canada projected to fall short of goal of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions

- JORDAN PRESS AND MIA RABSON

OTTAWA— The cost to consumers of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s keystone environmen­tal policy will have to rise if the country is to meet its Paris climate accord goals, the parliament­ary budget office says, just as the country may be finally pulling itself out of a historic recession.

The question is how much the ffederal carbon price will have to increase and who pays it.

As it is, Canada is projected to fall short of its goal of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions by 30 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030. The government’s latest projection­s show an excess of 77 megatonnes of carbon dioxide and its equivalent­s by then.

If the government uses its carbon price alone to close that gap, the PBO said that price will have to rise from the current $50 a tonne to between $117 and $289 depending on whether it is applied equally to all emitters, or if big emitters get a break to keep them competitiv­e with foreign firms.

The actual financial impact might be less when factoring in inflation, but that measure has sharply dropped during the pandemic, which has also created wide uncertaint­y about the near- and medium-term future.

The Liberals have not said wwhat the path for the levy might be after 2022, but small businesses in particular have asked for a reprieve from increases because they don’t know how they’ll cover the added costs while revenues remain low.

Trudeau on Thursday said federal measures like the carbon tax and his recently announced plan to ban single-use plastics starting next year are about dealing with long-term issues even as the country deals with the COVID-19 crisis.

“This is about reminding people that even as we work incredibly hard on keeping them safe now, we’re going to be there for the long term, to make sure that we’re prosperous into the coming decades,” Trudeau said.

The scenarios envisioned by tthe budget office assume the f federal fuel charge will apply to all provinces and territorie­s post-2022, and that carbon taxes are the only measure used to close the emissions gap — big assumption­s that don’t match current reality.

Although the report doesn’t get into the merits of a carbon tax, or the economic and environmen­tal costs of climate change, it does suggest a likeliof price protection­s for energy-intensive sectors reliant on trade, such as oil and gas.

If other countries subject their industries to the full impact of carbon pricing to meet their Paris targets, the need to protect Canadian sectors “““would be obviated,” the report says.

“However, no country will likely submit its (energy-intensive) industries to the full extent of incrementa­l carbon pricing, to avoid losing competitiv­eness, unless their trading partners do,” budget officer Yves Giroux wrote.

With economic activity slowed down and more people working remotely, emissions from driving have fallen.

But at the same time, efficiency gains that could have lowered emissions further might be delayed as economic uncertaint­y dampens business investment.

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