Toronto Star

B.C. premier threatens to bring in carbon levy

Christy Clark also seeking ban on thermal coal exports

- GREG QUINN AND NATALIE OBIKO PEARSON BLOOMBERG

VANCOUVER— British Columbia’s premier threatened to impose a $70 carbon tax on U.S. thermal coal exports if she’s re-elected next week.

“Ideally, the federal government will act on our request to ban thermal coal in our ports — but if they don’t, British Columbia will charge a carbon levy on it,” Christy Clark said at a lumber plant in southern B.C. on Tuesday, adding it would “make it uncompetit­ive to ship through B.C. ports.”

Clark, who is seeking a third term on May 9, called for a thermal coal export ban last week in retaliatio­n for U.S. President Donald Trump’s new tariffs on softwood lumber, the province’s biggest export commodity.

The move — made in a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau — sent the shares of both Canadian export terminal operator Westshore Terminals Investment Corp. and U.S. miner Cloud Peak Energy Inc. plunging.

Rick Curtsinger, a spokespers­on for Cloud Peak, didn’t immediatel­y respond to phone and email messages seeking comment.

Westshore general manager Glenn Dudar wasn’t immediatel­y available for comment.

Clark, in a statement posted on her Liberal Party’s website, said she hopes the federal government will enact the ban quickly. If not, she plans to instruct staff to begin drafting the regulatory framework for the levy upon re-election.

About 94 per cent of the 6.6 million metric tonnes of thermal coal exported from B.C. last year came from the U.S., according to the statement.

The proposed carbon price reflects the costs of greenhouse gas emissions caused by the extraction, processing, transporta­tion and combustion of thermal coal through a B.C. terminal, it said.

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