BC Implements Carbon Tax

authordefault
on

The (right-of-centre) government of the Canadian province of British Columbia broke ground Tuesday, becoming the second Canadian jurisdiction to implement a carbon tax to address climateย change.

The tax, which will eventually apply to all fossil fuels, starts small – amounting to 2.4 cents per litre of gasoline (around 0.6 cents per US gallon) in its first year – but triple in four years and will bring in a total of $1.8 billion Canadian over that time, according to Finance Minister Carole Taylor. It is also designed to be revenue neutral, and the government has promised to account for the offset so people will be able to see where exactly the increased revenue is being returned toย taxpayers.

Remarkably, the left-leaning New Democratic Party Opposition (NDP), once closely tied to the environmental movement across Canada, found a way to attack this, probably the most decisive climate change policy initiative yet introduced in Northย America.

So, despite the hysterical lefty bashing by self-interested think tanks, and despite the self-righteous rhetoric of centre-left politicians and supporters: in Canada, as in the United States, a left coast right-winger is leading the way – making the kind of foundational policy shift that could finally begin to turn the fossil fuel supertanker around. BC Premier Gordon Campbell is also following in the footsteps of Quebec Premier (and former federal Conservative) Jean Charest, whose government introduced a smaller carbon tax lastย summer.

Let’s hope this sanity isย contagious.

Related Posts

on

Anonymous group of senior executives say major ad agencies are โ€œenabling harm rather than doing good.โ€

Anonymous group of senior executives say major ad agencies are โ€œenabling harm rather than doing good.โ€
on

The Reform leader has been jetting around the world to promote Trumpโ€™s climate denial agenda.

The Reform leader has been jetting around the world to promote Trumpโ€™s climate denial agenda.
on

The worldโ€™s largest outdoor advertising company warned city councillors of โ€œfar-reaching consequencesโ€ hours before the landmark vote.

The worldโ€™s largest outdoor advertising company warned city councillors of โ€œfar-reaching consequencesโ€ hours before the landmark vote.
on

For decades, ExxonMobil argued consumers, not oil giants, should take responsibility for fossil fuel pollution. Itโ€™s now backing Carbon Measuresโ€™ accounting scheme, which moves pollution โ€œliabilitiesโ€ to buyersโ€™ books.

For decades, ExxonMobil argued consumers, not oil giants, should take responsibility for fossil fuel pollution. Itโ€™s now backing Carbon Measuresโ€™ accounting scheme, which moves pollution โ€œliabilitiesโ€ to buyersโ€™ books.