Calgary Herald

Tories vow notto impose carbon tax

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MONCTON, N.B. • New Brunswick’s Tory leader has joined forces with his counterpar­ts in Ontario, Saskatchew­an and Alberta, promising that his government won’t bring in a carbon tax on consumers if elected on Sept. 24.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Blaine Higgs said Monday he believes a Tory government would “meet its obligation­s to the environmen­t” with methods other than raising levies on consumers, but he was not clear in a news release on what precisely that means.

Ottawa has said the provinces must place a levy on carbon that is sufficient enough to meet the federal government plans for carbon reduction.

The federal government has said that if provinces don’t place the levy on consumers aimed at reducing their consumptio­n of fossil fuels, Ottawa will do so, and Ottawa will then have final say in how the revenue-neutral tax is funnelled back to the taxpayers in New Brunswick.

Higgs has been on the record saying he would join with other Conservati­ve government­s in opposing Ottawa’s carbon emissions law in the courts.

“A Blaine Higgs government believes we can meet our obligation­s to the environmen­t without digging deeper into taxpayers’ wallets,” says the news release issued Monday.

“We will develop a comprehens­ive plan to ensure we are reducing our emissions output and providing incentives for green energy and green technology developmen­t.”

The Liberal government in New Brunswick hasn’t imposed a provincial carbon tax on consumers, but it has turned to Ottawa to regulate the industrial side of carbon emissions.

The Liberals are taking a portion of the excise tax on gasoline and are dedicating it toward a climate change fund, however this approach hasn’t been accepted by Ottawa yet.

Premier Brian Gallant said Monday Higgs’s threat of a legal challenge is unrealisti­c.

“The court case, we don’t think has much chance of succeeding, which means that Blaine Higgs and the Conservati­ves are accepting a federal backstop, which I think is a mistake, for us,” he said.

“The plan we put forward will phase out coal by 2030, will ask large corporatio­ns who are the largest emitters to pay their fair share when it comes to the emissions they are putting out, and we will ensure there not be one cent more on the consumers of our province.”

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Blaine Higgs

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