The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Tax evasion

P.E.I.’s carbon plan avoids tax hike, but means extra one cent per litre on gas

- BY STU NEATBY

Prince Edward Island’s premier says the overall tax burden for Islanders under the federal government’s carbon pricing scheme will amount to an increase of one cent per litre in gas taxes.

During a press conference Tuesday afternoon, Premier Wade MacLauchla­n confirmed

the federal government will raise taxes on gasoline and diesel by four cents a litre starting in April 2019.

But MacLauchla­n said the province would offset this increase by reducing gasoline excise taxes by three cents in 2019.

In total, Islanders will see a one cent per litre tax increase on gasoline, the lowest in Canada. Home heating will be exempt from carbon taxation, which the province says will save Islanders $38.7 million in taxes.

This federal-provincial deal would expire in 2020.

Without the exemption and the provincial tax reductions, MacLauchla­n said the federal carbon tax plan would have imposed a $46 million tax burden on Islanders.

“Our approach throughout our climate change plan, linked to our energy plan, has been to prefer carrots over sticks, to prefer incentives over penalties,” MacLauchla­n said.

Earlier Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the federal government would be imposing a carbon tax on the provinces of Ontario, New Brunswick, Manitoba and Saskatchew­an as a “pollution price.” The federal government said it would return the revenue collected through individual dividend cheques, ranging from $248 per household in New Brunswick to $598 per household in Saskatchew­an in 2019.

P.E.I.’s plan, which will involve the province paying for the tax cuts on gasoline, will not see residents collect a dividend cheque from the federal government.

The premier said the additional one cent per litre tax on gas will be “returned to Islanders,” but did not confirm whether this would be through program spending.

Island Finance Minister Heath MacDonald said the revenue from the one cent per litre tax would be returned “in programs that will be developed, similar to the heat pump program.”

MacLauchla­n said the province’s Auditor General will monitor the revenues generated by the tax on a yearly basis to ensure the funds are returned.

“To be clear, this is in no way about revenue generation,” MacLauchla­n said.

The premier said the province would continue to offer other incentives to reduce emissions from vehicles, which contribute the largest share of the Island’s carbon emissions. The province will continue to be eligible for the federal government’s $500-million Low Carbon Economy Fund.

Speaking in Ontario on Tuesday, Trudeau said the aim of the federal carbon tax was to ensure “it will no longer be free to pollute anywhere in Canada.”

Environmen­t Minister Richard Brown said the federal government allowed P.E.I. to negotiate the exemption on the federal carbon tax because it recognized the leadership the Island had played in wind energy and energy efficiency programs.

“We have nothing to apologize for here on Prince Edward Island. Each and every Islander is contributi­ng substantia­lly to reducing greenhouse gases,” Brown said.

The province’s carbon tax plan was finalized over the weekend after a meeting of the Liberal caucus Sunday afternoon and a cabinet meeting Monday.

 ?? MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN ?? Finance Minister Heath MacDonald, from left, Premier Wade MacLauchla­n and Environmen­t Minister Richard Brown announced Tuesday that P.E.I. would see exemptions from the federal carbon tax announced on Tuesday.
MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN Finance Minister Heath MacDonald, from left, Premier Wade MacLauchla­n and Environmen­t Minister Richard Brown announced Tuesday that P.E.I. would see exemptions from the federal carbon tax announced on Tuesday.

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