Feds approve Alberta’s carbon tax on big industrial emitters; tax on fuel coming Jan. 1

OTTAWA — The federal government is giving the Alberta government a passing grade for its industrial carbon tax.

Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said Friday his department agrees Alberta’s planned $30-a-tonne carbon price on emissions from big industry meets federal requirements.

“I’m pleased that our made-in-Alberta Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction (TIER) regulation has been accepted under the federal Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, ensuring that the federal carbon pricing system does not apply to Alberta’s large industries in 2020,” said Environment and Parks Minister Jason Nixon.

However, the climate battles between Ottawa and Edmonton will continue because on Jan. 1 the federal government will still start applying its carbon tax on the purchase in Alberta of fuels like gasoline, natural gas, and propane.

Alberta used to have a consumer carbon tax on fuel but Premier Jason Kenney and the newly elected United Conservative Party cancelled it earlier this year.

READ MORE: Alberta officially repeals the carbon tax

A fuel surcharge and a carbon tax for big industry are the two components of the national carbon pricing system applied in any province without similar systems of their own.

Since April, Ottawa has applied the fuel surcharge in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick but Saskatchewan was exempted from most of the big-industry element because it has a version that Ottawa deemed strong enough.

 

The Canadian Press

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