Close X
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Eby announces ending of provincial carbon tax, after Carney kills federal version

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2025 04:29 PM
  • Eby announces ending of provincial carbon tax, after Carney kills federal version

British Columbia's government will follow through on its promise to repeal the province's consumer carbon tax after new Prime Minister Mark Carney moved to eliminate the federal version of the levy on Friday.

Premier David Eby said at a news conference in Surrey that legislation is being prepared to repeal the consumer carbon tax during the current legislative session, with sittings scheduled to resume on March 31.

While Eby said he won't recall the legislature before then to remove the tax, the legislation will not only repeal the carbon price but also get rid of a planned increase set for April 1.

That's the day the federal consumer carbon price will end.

"With the low Canadian dollar, people have less money to go around," Eby said. "This will support them with that. But also, I want to reassure people that we'll be making sure that the big polluters continue to pay."

Eby's announcement came about an hour after Carney said his cabinet had agreed to end the federal consumer carbon price.

The premier had made a commitment last year to get rid of the consumer carbon tax at the first opportunity — if the federal government removed the national carbon levy requirement.

Eby said work is also underway at the provincial Finance Ministry to make sure that B.C. is "able to accommodate this commitment within the budget."

Families who had been receiving carbon tax rebate cheques under the program will not be getting them anymore, he said.

Earlier Friday, Carney made eliminating the consumer carbon price his first move after taking office as prime minister, undoing the signature policy of his predecessor, Justin Trudeau.

Carney made the announcement after the first cabinet meeting under his watch, saying that his government is "focused on action."

The order-in-council signed by Carney stipulates that the federal charge will be removed from consumer purchases as of April 1.

Eby said people in B.C. are doing all they can to fight climate change, and he doesn't want them to have to choose between affordability and climate action. 

While Eby said the carbon tax has been an important tool for the province for over 15 years, cost-of-living pressures for households and the pending removal of federal carbon pricing showed there was no longer support for the tax. 

However, he said that "output-based pricing" — which is "industry-specific" and places carbon charges on sectors based on their individual capacity to reduce emissions through technology — remains in place.

"It puts a price on carbon that encourages them to adopt those technologies without creating such a burden that all of a sudden people are importing concrete from Indonesia that's high carbon and takes a huge amount of carbon to ship here," Eby said.

"We are not removing the output-based pricing system. We want to continue to send that signal to industry that we want them to adopt these technologies to reduce pollution in our province."

The Opposition B.C. Conservatives have previously voiced concern that Eby's New Democrat government would scrap the consumer carbon price but then boost charges on businesses, which would still affect consumers in the end.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax
Mark Carney's victory in the Liberal leadership race puts the final nail in the coffin of Ottawa's controversial plan to hike the inclusion rate on capital gains. When they tabled their budget last spring, the federal Liberals presented the plan to change capital gains as a way to get wealthy Canadians and corporations to pay more — but the plan has faced a series of delays ever since.

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax

Trudeau pushes for RCMP reform during final days in office

Trudeau pushes for RCMP reform during final days in office
During his final days in office, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is pushing for long-promised reform to the RCMP.  A government report released Monday, which highlights concerns about Canada's capacity to meet "the new threat environment," says it's time to modernize the police service to focus on "the most serious forms of criminality."

Trudeau pushes for RCMP reform during final days in office

Liberal leadership race raises questions about possible fundraising 'loophole'

Liberal leadership race raises questions about possible fundraising 'loophole'
Only two of the candidates in the Liberal leadership race — Mark Carney and Ruby Dhalla — disclosed their fundraising events to Elections Canada. A political transparency advocate says this exposes a "loophole" in the rules for funding political campaigns that needs to be closed — since some of the contenders held fundraisers without publicly disclosing them or reporting who attended.

Liberal leadership race raises questions about possible fundraising 'loophole'

Conservative MPs beat Liberals, NDP on online engagement, study finds

Conservative MPs beat Liberals, NDP on online engagement, study finds
The report from McGill’s Media Ecosystem Observatory found in 2024, online posts from federal Conservative MPs garnered 61 per cent more engagement — likes, shares and comments — than those from Liberal and NDP MPs combined. 

Conservative MPs beat Liberals, NDP on online engagement, study finds

World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic five years ago today

World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic five years ago today
Five years ago, the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic of the novel coronavirus, setting off a series of policies that transformed Canadians' lives for years. The WHO's declaration followed months of warning signs about the dangers of COVID-19, including mass lockdowns in China and Italy, and served as a wake-up call for many Canadians.

World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic five years ago today

Canada's dairy industry says tariffs less scary than threats to supply management

Canada's dairy industry says tariffs less scary than threats to supply management
Members of Canada's dairy industry say they're less worried about the threat of steep U.S. tariffs than about a looming battle over supply management. U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to impose what he calls "reciprocal" tariffs on Canadian dairy, saying they're a response to Canada's 250 per cent duty on U.S. dairy imports.

Canada's dairy industry says tariffs less scary than threats to supply management