Journal Pioneer

DIRE UN CLIMATE REPORT NOT CHANGING ISLAND’S PLAN.

Dire UN climate report not changing Island’s climate plan

- BY STU NEATBY

A recent UN report calling for a global carbon pricing regime has not changed the provincial government’s assessment that P.E.I. can achieve its climate change targets without a carbon tax.

Environmen­t Minister Richard Brown, the Island’s Environmen­t minister, said he has been reviewing a recent report of the Inter-Government­al Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released earlier this month.

The report found that a 1 C rise in global temperatur­e has already occurred and that effects are already being felt through more extreme weather, rising sea levels and diminishin­g Arctic sea ice.

But Brown said the IPCC report has not changed the provincial government’s current plan, which does not include a carbon tax.

A carbon tax is designed to make carbon-polluting purchases by consumers and businesses more costly.

“Does our plan still hold up? I think it does,” said Brown. In September, the province’s climate plan was submitted to the federal government.

The plan aims to reduce the Island’s greenhouse gas emissions by 30 per cent below 2005 emission levels by 2030. It does not include a carbon tax, nor cap-and-trade, the two options for the province under the federal government’s Pan-Canadian Framework on Clean Growth and Climate Change.

The IPCC report, prepared by close to 100 scientists, found that most countries are not on track to limit a temperatur­e rise to 1.5 degrees, and calls for a “rapid and far-reaching” transition away from carbon-heavy fuels.

The report also recommende­d a global carbon pricing regime, even recommendi­ng carbon pricing between $135 and $5,500 per ton of carbon dioxide pollution by 2030. By comparison, Canada’s target under the PanCanadia­n Framework, set to be implemente­d starting in January of 2019, calls for a carbon price to begin at $20 per tonne, maxing out at $50 per tonne in 2022. Under $20 per tonne, the average cost to Island households would be $315 for the first year before reaching $788 by 2022. Under the Pan-Canadian Framework, the province would decide how carbon tax revenues would be used – whether they would be given back in tax breaks or be used to fund green programs.

The federal government is currently reviewing P.E.I.’s climate plan.

The issue of a carbon tax has become contentiou­s amongst P.E.I.’s political parties. The provincial PC Party has pledged to fight the imposition of a carbon tax on P.E.I., possibly going so far as joining a constituti­onal legal challenge with the government­s of Saskatchew­an or Ontario. The party has yet to release its own plan to meet the province’s emissions reduction targets.

The Green Party has introduced a plan to implement a “revenue neutral” carbon tax which would be offset by a quarterly dividend cheque mailed to households earning less than $110,000 per year in income. Under this plan, the agricultur­e and fisheries industry would see exemptions to the tax. Brown said the province would not pursue a legal challenge if the federal government imposes a carbon tax in January.

But two policy experts contacted by The Guardian said a carbon tax regime has been demonstrat­ed to be the most costeffect­ive method of reducing emissions.

Dale Beugin, executive director of the Ecofiscal commission, said provinces have essentiall­y two means of reducing emissions: regulation including carbon taxes or subsidies.

“There’s a pretty limited set of alternativ­es,” Beugin said. “Subsidies can be kind of expensive both because they require government­s to pick specific technologi­es to subsidize and because you end up paying people to do what they would have done anyway.”

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